Show - - - ' -- - - - t s — r ' 1 ' s t s I : ' s : t - t 42 A: Sunday Morning - feeeteee"---- --- -- ' S ' - - prsrogen '1 eril:': :Elm '''' zr'''''-'-'''- e el "4Deese 4 - ee?1 - - - e e )'t- 4 - eee---eeeteeee- a : :' ' '' P e'7 - :' - 'xi r" - -: 1ti ea( p-- ' - i :''- "f-- 401111W 1 It 1 OINK' ': - iff) e'AREA FACTORY AREAS 7' ''1 7::::- - ::?:' á : i- 0' : - St Amu& ' fii:-- - : - itsuti s- - IIS '7- -' P - Th Etzlingen' erk"bruck 0 ------ --— e - R A e -- MiLES -- ''4v - 1''4'3A '‘-- -- ''' H a s se' Ile-- zi:lit - 1ct-i!'zt: - i:-!:1- - n z - t- - lir' tr--'- ftk Ober-Wurzbo- YLi-tg- c - Hetkindalhitim -- - - i'''3 witti 1: ife ' ' N - ''' Eashfiew Assweiler ' -- r - ::::e le - el -"- d"erS"'"1 It : omm- hoim ' re Erfwailsr e- - - Eschrin 9 en (' K7 COAL MINES n STEEL WORKS SliAsransboth FrA POWER HOUSES iv'i" 0 RR YARDS ee ubinges - --- ) 7- ii aoi - i KLEINBUTTERSDORF - ' Auersnioceer tif: s ‘ ' r :: -' El 14wihpea A )t '''''e-- t ' iechingon ' 1 5 filliMMEMMMORMEO ‘ - ---- NialCEyc3k 4 ' -- iC':la'- - - : a itohr-'1-ch'- e eeeleeee-e-e-e--reeee- t:t ) '' 1 - Y ! ' ' v 1 INGBERTSe:4?-''-7‘-s-- : 3 2 1 --- 's I a'''' 4 i - FaN R: 4 : :! e Kerbach ' I'Scheidt JP Gressbliederstroff r e Aistingon '-- Ntersibach - "146 : ll '7 4'- ' : 0 4 ''':Q tr ST se1' eee ' :1- : t''-- '' '33' ee' G ‘ 1t1-- '"51)-tlinga- y - int' ' ve s eee 1- : i : (rtlo '''' '''- t-- z 7t It G v ci I n g n :1::'Spichatc 04P 4' ' -- ' r S : "P'eeliFORBACH - --- - - ?PS '3'I7- r E (I ( 10 -- i t A'r'0:''ji':?' :M ::U8rbach POIty01 ee 5 Adoe 14 1 oso - p - :- itamersweiltori - V ?- - vr‘ Grand a l ' 1 : 1- -- eieee-v- e - f : on Alit C ' - Nipiie':-:f- : to ' :': : - ' t: t tc4- raNeuscheidt - - Sec a ma h sun i:-:: - - V 4 ''')e 1VC:)' '' e )PriI'')''1'i)- A eee'41'-- - ?40 x 4 P'? ' :::: teeeee-'--- e !-- - ' - 1' 5 - FACTORYi':'-''''''- :' k :4v eti'''e'etet'JJ'4 - l' :t: '1-'q 0 i7 ' I° :ili- - 6 eet e e kp c : 'ic---'-- tk A! 4 iep t of ( ' its '"' NZ4:l! ''': ' 4t ' - :SUL 2 1 -- -- eeez- e e' p i ass 4e11 ''4le " f- '- '4 :' 'i'' ” A if i e-- - )''x'-''''1-- 4- t ''21- zL---' c'‘ tst5s 44 '' k' ' sofN'i"e : '" 'f0"15 AI' ( '' ' el oty eere Teteeeeeeeieereete Jettei eet---e- : i: -- - - k t - e ll'ive'':!:::: eeeeeeKlersethal6iiii: '' -- "eg 4Z' '' 44c'- -et - e'- : 5A A RBRUCKEN i - ' ' --- -- I : c-- lo i 0 ? V4:'::::!: - Plants In Low Countries Other 9000- - Ottweiler-Neunkirche- At latest reports there were Boveri 31 WASHLNGTON Dec 2 (N10 Times) — Liberated industrial plants in FranceBelgium and the : si t e: FORESTS Evangelist's Husband Dies COOK- - TEA LONDON Dec 2 (A—The Rev W Hudson Shaw 80 husband of Dr Maude Royden England's best known woman evangelist died in his sleep after a two months' illness it was announced G lit 35 West : ' : ' :i : SALT LAKE CITY SOUTH IHoodquorfors for f ' 'CO' COFFEE Et and FINE HOTEL RESTAURANT ' ' I COFFEE e Saturday ' ' i - : ' ANDERSON'S RjNGS YOU'LL BE THE ARE - ' - 001"" : t ' 4"''''''--' ecese" ' e- - e 's' - - AT e ti 'e mines employing 67000 men The coal is good for industrial uses and gas manufacture moderately good for coke Average yearly disclosed Saturdayhight (latest production for 1924-2- 7 Among the military items x1 1315 tons was 13361000 available) to be procured from these pected is a for Saarbrucken This compares with average junction of which is no production plants Pennfive railway lines and five main bituminous coal output in here by acute man power retarded but a al tons small has 100000000 of It highways sylvania Some lignite or "brown r'good river port chiefly for load- shortages are heavy duty truck year coal" is produced in the Saar ing coal The Saar river is navi- tires truck parts and tentage which also It is scooped up from near gable as far as Saarguemines duck These are supplies on the s the surface F75raininc lee As to usthaaorfguSeamarinberauciktecnonin- chraivtiecableepnrodfourctisoonmelisr alongside Blast furnaces and steel plants dominate the industrial scene nects with the Rhinemarne canal heavy artillery ammunitiori heavy which stretches All along the At the other end it flows into field artillery radar equipment assault transports and bombers river from Saarbrucken to Volk- the Moselle at KonL ' The Vereinigte Huettenlingen ' werke has the largest Iron land WHY- ARE OUR COFFEES THE FINEST? It makes armor steel works plate forgings steel structures etc Also important are the HalWe Invite You to Visit Our Plant and See bergerhuette works at Brebach How Perfect Our Coffees Are Produced and the Saarlaendisches Stahlwerk at Neuscheidt I "Masters of the Coffee Blending Art" 1 1 SHOPS WATER WORKS - Netherlands will be swung into action to supplement American ' factories in suppling the treour mendous needs of advancing armed forces in the European theater James F Byrnes director of war mobilization and reconversion - - A : 4 elec- Maschinebau A G diesel engines and Luettgens Waggonfabrilt railway c a r s Other principal industries of the Saar are glass chemical tin and stoneware manufactures tobacco processing spinning and brewing There is a mining academy at Saarbrucken as well as a castle and a Gothic church dating from from the Saar river between Saarbrucken and Volklingen to n the neighborhood industrial Important Brow--n I Allies Steam Up - eeeeetee eel at are estimated 000000 tons The main part gf works are the coal field stretches north tric motors -- - - - e ::- - ee : - extent Associated Press Writer The close packed Saarland industrial valley has been a hotly contested trade thoroughfare since nanodrnamniltitimareyL The Romans fought the German tribes there Frencn troops under Louis XIV and Napoleon marched throUgh The first engagement of the Franco-Prussiawar was fought at Saarbrucken the leading city (The name means "Saar bridge")) Allied troops in the first World war drove through it and now the U S Third army ' is entering the region "For the most part however" the National Geographic Society Says "the Saar has been German territory occupied by Germans except at rare intervals for more than 100 years before the peace of Versailles "Under: the terms of that treaty when the region was taken from Germany it was placed under a League of Nations commission with the provision that a plebiscite should be held 13 years later In 1935 this vote offering three alternatives—reentry into the reich union with Ftance or continuance of the League of Nations status—was taken "The result: Overwhelming majority in favor of return to Germany" The life of the Saar is coal Its reserves some 70 square miles in P - Saarland Battles Date Back to Roman Days By Herman Allen :::- - -- ) U ' - ee '4 '''1'1 7 -: - - - el 4Az' AZ MalStCltt 0 0 ii r turstonhausen 1 : - - s tPt C ''' eeee Jo : 1''!1 tenvia ' -‘ ' ' e 4-- ' -:- -- - - a - ''- — t F -- - tet-e- 9 k' 0-- eeile eta 'Pete! e ee LA - -- eee'e:-es- ee--'$''- - '7!'-- eeee---esee - VOLKLINGEN ::e:' ee i:''- - T eo Nee - :: :eee ' 7::t:::--- (14 Rie---- eetr- e -t-eeeseas--e f ISC kb OC h e e - 0- e- ee '''''-z-- 'Set eeekteee:ereTeee eveeee e : ' En9e if angen PUTTI-INGE- - :11- Anted Prize Nu'gget-'7Nex- t ''' :i in pee': e s' en-eeeeeeee-e- ree ' t b ' 'V'' '''''' ta(-- 1 e ' - eeea'e:eee-e- t peeeee 0 ee-e- e eP 4 eee31 ' 0: 4 ee -- ekeesecest't'p - Fj r' 0 4 i:-': eel 451' '' 0 AO eeFLA ) eeteeee--e---eee--eeee t-- eeee ' ee tee' eaHerransohy: et 'es'eeiet 4' :' eetee' 'SZ " ee-e'( el- - re: ' ere:lee-1 lee yvl " if I 1 - 1 ? e1Neudorts p N :s e -- : Ala:: - 01 ''- c - r4-1- ' i stee ees0:ree-ezekz- SELLERBA04 ':' i :- V I Gvellen 'December 3 ' eeeeeeeeee eee - -- se ' gakt Patton Cracks Saar Industrial Y ': tttle 5alt - ariburtft - ' --- ii ts ' Third Stubs :Pey Into 1310n4igsa404iiIi All Alm Bags r ii - -- (Continued from rage One) artny stood on the west bank of the Roer after recapturing two towns lost Friday Fighting continued in Beeck to the west and twfore Lindern now in American ' bands The U S Pinta army' tried to break across the Inde river after subjugating all but one pocket ley that part of Inden lying on the west bank but was fought to a standstill in terrific artillery fire that saw shells bursting on American positions' at the rate of one a second In that vital sector EiX MileS horthwest of the Roer stronghold of Duren the Germans were re:wide ported to have trenches soMoved and deep that enemy tanks through them without being observed—something new in trench warfare Roth aides were pouring on the heaviest- artillery fire since the onset of Gen Eisenhower's win- S ' -- i i ' 1 - I : ' house-to-hou- I i ' " - i ' ' s e - THE RESTORAT1011 L OF ALL TIIII:GS - idle DIseussielts Suktocts - ' "TIIE ETER11117 ' ' by - I ' ' " - 1:0 ''' t I ' -- - ' - Fielding Smith '14 - : : - ' ' - '- - the Of j t41441 e ' Latter-da- y fc le sin ts From ' ' - Ceechrteriestfoatelal the TABERNACLE - Alexander Schreiner Organist J Vernon LeeMaster Vocalist ' K S ' L- ' Sunday 9 to 9:30 p m r t ) 1 : : -"re-- ' i : t ' - ' l''' L c:7-1- ""' 4-''-- el ' -- 7 ''xi ' ic-(- --4-- 1 'ye ' i 1etekItA - ' e e - - ' - 2-- A tp: 1 - e e ' - e - 4"da le!! 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I o0 -- --- --- -- e - i dp p 1 'Not-- 1 a ) 1 E V -- - - ell e ot1 - - 1011111e ' 0P'16- - '"' 40 ‘ ' I ' VS Alz At - ' L t f baguette platinum settings - f 4101111)4'' 6 ' I V fiery - : er' - - s - 412 z 4 - eid 11goleoll k - - ft J)k e ' - - f' i blue-whit- ''' ' - et :op- curved wedding ring and 18 small diamonds end large brilliant diamond platinum set In- - S ' I' ' ' ' t S 1 Exquisitely rings with - t ' — 'IF k Beautifully pair with 0' d ': e-- - 1 0 - 4 - - - : I ' - ' 'skist'sP ' ' - ::''::s::7' '::' ere?' ' - ' ' 'i- 4 e '' :- 49: '' ' - i Nee -- ' ! - ' ' - - ( - ‘4 : ' ' :: II - No 1 NI I 0t I '!' o "'iw -- - ' : ' 1:''' 7:: - ebe °se i ' ' ' -- : - '! 1? ' 'N ' 1 : ei Lewd - '41 - '' i ' ' eek e - 1 -- '''' ''s N 'Is - !- - TY ---- Pqr r - ' e -- zee '614 II v '''' '' ' I e edelig I ik ) s - eeeei':'::'"- Ander- - NeeiN $I 500 tax 60 - i 1 - smallardiarnonds platinum set Real beauties both including federal sio ri — r704 s cut mount- 1114 carat fiery with inip blue white stone and 10 diamonds and - ' ' ' ' 1 STONES PERFECT N VII i - ele ::1:: 1up around drainboards bathtubs Use inside or outside Can be painted EASY TO APPLY - I ' y t4 '1':'::' ee tdillort ' i ' i - ' ''' son's "Ill plas- e - e- ' I i 7 1 :' 1--: wer-e- t a r ' DESIGNS est creations and perfect stones are ete pliable - Nst- E - eitir I RY CO 111PANY 263 SOUTH MAIN SALT LAKE 3 t - 111 — 2441 WASHINGTONOGDENI ' 1 ' ' ' '' i e- unusual beauty finer lustre greater brilliance and more enduring value For only the smart- v ic stops heat I C ' 1 N'ew i Flotered at the Unrolls like ribbon Just press rito place city as8 second and Ii t stay s put Does not crack chtp or class matter under act of March 1879 shrink A roll covers about 80 feet enough SubweriDtinn rates: Utah Idorici NoRda for 5 windows land Wyomint daily and Sunday month $US S110: veer In advance $15110: etiewhere At your Dealer's In U S daily and Sunday month $150 Higher West of Rockies and Canada The Tribune ix a member of the Assn- 4 'Circuioe Frio rtated PreFM The Associated Press is ex- elusively entitled to the use for renrculueW MORTELL CO flan of ell news ttisnatches eretitted to it or not otherwise crenited in this ruiner and 650 Burch St Kankakee I& also the local news published herein : r L 1:4 Maned every morning tvoat office at Salt Lake 7 - 4k r'''' r N - offensive plowing through the deen mud and thick forests The consensus is that the American armies face a long hard win- mteurchof inighlityinegs awhhdichauifsfetriongcaost Price that must be paid for victory over a fanatical enemy ' ' 1 - - - I I t' - - 1 ' 44 - i11-4- 11 ' ' ' -- I '' ''''' 'GATto- !:TI"KH-j--:7'704I- i i r ' - - ijlti' C7i 1 '''' 1466e---- ' - ':t zste0-2-- ' 110" '4J ''1t- sudden breakthrough such as that at St Lo looks virtually Iimpossible to those of us who have been watching the First army's ti s e- - e -- 400 :- 1 t '' "' - A tZ41' - - '' '--- aw " deaAth '' ' f ? - UTILITY TAPE - v ! '1 l'i' '''i1-- 1 e te t F- - ' I li '':' ' f-:- iii 4 : k '21-:'-''- 01 irr 1 '‘ ' ' i' your betrothal and marriage rings Be sure your assurance of they're from Anderson's --"'- : ' '2 Her most valued most lasting possession Germans Contest Every Ineh Of Allied Drive in Reich Yi:74:i:'7 - ?A' i - - kF"- 4 1 :li - i 111' li - BEAUTIFUL BRILLIANT FIERY -- - ' - t g Ns0' ese i EXQUISITELY : or tile Council of the Twelve - - -: ' A-2- - t' ' "Z - be-tri- g Joseph : - 4 I'l ' i 'A'Neeee-- - - OF TIIE FAMILY" 1 0 -- 1 - - ' ' ' - : - - ' - ' i i - :- 1 N ) 't1 e 1 'It I -: eeee--- '!- -- i - 4 ''''''' fir ggae I - Sarin et I - ''-- kit e ' Ji New ' ' 'N e ' ' A British Second army spokes- man declared the Germans were suffering terrific casualties greater than they could replace all : along the western front and Un- official estimates from the First army sector set total enemy casualties there alone at nearly 30000 since Nov 16 The Third army drivet through Saarlautern carried abnoet to the - Saar river Most of Saarlautern a city of 32000 lies on the west bank of the river It was the first of Hitler's Saar basin cities to feel the : 00"1":' 1 ' rg ' - - - ee - - ' Iv lel'st 1 '" - - r - - offensive fight-Strasbou- - : t ke : - ter se ' - t anssrn ureoeror ' i recap-counterattac- ks - ' :- 1 1 - : " -- - 28 Planes Over Koblenz weight of the conquering- armies i In between them other Ameri Infantry of the 95th :division can and French forces spilling out moved in from the west with itr- - of the Vosges mountains were i mored tank destroyers in close consolidating positions within two support The Germans made few miles of the road junction of Se le3'44- - Allies (Official) death stands stat By United Press To the southeast the 80th in- The U S Ninth army reboundDec 2—An ROLONDON off repeated ing from Friday's reverses fantry division beat of American eight to nine miles bombers force Oplane west of the main Saar city la Rhineland blasted the and fighters then fought on north in Linnich Saarbrucken rail center of Koblenz Saturday The Germa n' bridgehead at where bitter shooting down at least 28 German collapsed quickly aft- was in progress fighters In fierce air battles which er the bulk of the enemy forces ing Ten miles south of that front an official prediction said would withdrew across the Rhine during the night and only 37 prisoners Lt Gen- Courtney H Hodges' grow more deadly in the future U S strategic air force headFirst army troops battled to wipe were taken The Germans blew all three out a strong pocket in the south quarters said the luftwaffe apparRhine bridges at Strasbourg and part of Inden and were dealing ently is building up new strength continued to pour artillery fire with entrenched forces south of for coming air battles and is inthe town ' into the city creasing fighter production in and Meanwhile the Seventh was Four miles west of Duren they widely dispersed underground of the woods - "backyard" factories ' clearing-morregistering important gains both were In an advance from Jungersdorf-north and south of Strasbourg-aNineteen U S planes11 bombLt ented Alexander M Patch extvttoward Merode Stubborn resist- - ers and missing his advantageous positions anee made progress slow for units from Saturday's raid but a complot on the Rhine plain closing in on Gey and Brandensaid that six of the fightWhile-son:lof his'iroepsfought berg four and seven miles south munique ers are- believed safe in friendly into Haguenaie 16 miles north of of Duren In the Gey sector the Germans territory Strasbourg other forces swept 10 miles to the northwest across the threw in two counterblows sum- - Nazis Elude Escort hills to within 10 miles of the moning crack parachute troops Koblenz la main control point for the attack and one made a for German rail traffic Palatinate opposite Armored units spearing south- deep penetration before it was the U S Third army front was in contained down Rhine the ward valldy 250 heavy bombers blasted by were casualties to American four miles reached high gains of up thick cloud cover which Boofzheim and Kogenheim 16 and but the Germans' were higher It through' was estimated four enemy divi- enabled German fighters to elude 19 miles south of Strasbourg escort of 550 planes The Seventh's tanks were no sions had been destroyed and two the powerful 30 and 50 German purBetween more than '300 miles from the others so badly cut up they have on one formasuit ofpounced ships since to be withdrawn had French the First army moving up of tion Liberators off a touching fensive from the south around Colmar: began furious battle that ranged through and below the clouds As many as 40 other enemy planes were encountered by one group of Thun'derbolt escorts which destroyed at least 10 in the area of Marburg While the Americans bombed Koblenz another force of R A F There always is the probability heavy bombers escorted by SpitBy Don Whitehead of a sudden crumbling of German fires and Mustangs smashed at the PARIS ' Dec 2 (—The heav- resistance but there are no signs Fhansa benzol plant on the out- lest fighting of the War is raging of it up front where the fight- skirts of Dortmund in the Ruhr along the western front as the ing is hard and bloody and where In a continuation of the !allies' German armies make ttheir last! the roar of cannon echoes con- campaign of annihilation against across the Cold sodden nazi fuel supplies savage stand in an effort' to stem tinuously and plains ' Machine Guns the American atdvance into Ger- forests A great deal of American' blood Smash many In other aerial operations a Is being spilled on German soil The Boil of Hitler's reich is battle in this war—and many force of 250 Marauders Havocs won slowly Every yard is No say none in the last and 6 attack bombers opening !contested by Germans fighting as veterans war—can campaign against compare in heartbreak- a softening-u- p they never have fought before line dethe Germans' sacrifice and with Siegfried ing hardship the are The Germans making n machine-gufenses at smashed the battle for forest Huertgen American gains as costly as pos- southeast of Aachen dug-i- n and antitank traps positions sible and they are costly There in Gen of Lt tanks the So beert Germans the have far path is every Indteation that the fightclubbed back slowly tmder a ter- George S Patton's Third army be will the winter ing throughout attacks were carried out in the same bitter slaughter Vntil rific artillery barrage armored theThe 8aarlautern sector and at Ensassault and whenever the skies a final decision is won dorf and Fraulatern between MerThree months ago hopes ran high have cleared by air power But inhave zig and Saarlaütern One Havoc these been beall over be Would secondary that the war ' was lost to fierce antiaircraft fire struments of destruction fore Christmas But the German Along the northern part of the Joe I the ex-Muddy slogging G' I armies did not collapse as bur- front It A F Spitfires attacked a carries the still home Infantryman German The front V-- 2 pected storage site in nHolland with in its straitjacket of nazi control ' denIn of the battle the cannon and machine-gufire had so enemy as fold Normandy did not many perup crust of a thick defenses The only sons had thought it would te enemy showed that he intended Once a break was achieved there rN On their Ito fight to the last and that is was nothlhg behind 41J—114 1 611 home grounds the Germans have l' i what he is doing now 4 4 e defenses in depth and doughboys (t) must fight their :way through all 't ''''''''' of them to get at defenders who 4r4 ire under orders to fight to the : 4 ' -- ( - 1 - 4 |