Show VW1144MOOTOSat717PA Look Araln basethrogh your atticcanand be added ''---- Telephone V ol 116 N o 32 31 ri 41 ment for metal that to nation:1s scrap pile and can be turned into guns and bombs for our fighting men To arrange for col:ections 3-75- 7 '") : I( i 1 11 ai t 't 1 t 4 'Mr alb ! t k 4 4 1 Heil t:''1 ' 13 ' L ' - " - 3 2 - '' - t' ''':'1- 07''' 1 ! 4111 ::- t - ' r : 1 t authorities) ' Ext 47 f For Salt Lake City and vicinity: : Occasional rain and cooler Sunday with snow in the mountains and moderate winds Maximum temperature Saturday 63 degrees minimum temperature 29 degrees (Issued by permission of military ‘ i i The Weather ' - i t Price Ten Cents Salt Lake City Utah Sunday Morning November 15 1912 - Aimm- I‘ - V A i ' 71 &rlit t ' t lip --:: 1 "11 r wii t L t 1:iita 11 14411a i 1 a - ri It 1""r 1 1 1-- —Ti 1 F 1 olit - i I 01) C00H T IL v "7 1 i 0 1 ' 8 ''''' ' I to I 61) CL1 i 1 I Leaders Ask Creation of Super VTR 'Comes Throun6 li—as Usual' ! 4 1 1 T4 t ! f ' i'r P 4 i ' i f: - Congress Group Seeks One-MaProduction Boss - 1 4 -- 411: ! 0 t - ':-- i 1 - ii k ' 44 - Akk ! "-- ) ' t - --- t f te: i:':i7 ! ‘ :' i I : 7 :t - - -1- '"1 z --- '' -- - P-- ' ''''''i- 1 7P'4:?:4'tr - '''--- - :1': : ia- Chairman Truman (13) Missouri of the senate defense t gating committee and Ca7rman Murray (ID) Montana cf the small business committee d the program sponsors told reporters they intended to press it through conrress as a d:rective to President The president ham the power now to set up such an Offc To:an observed "but it hasn't I ''''' 1 '1 'VA -(-"- t :'if - -- -- -- 77---- ' ' -- tt L145 " c k - It 4 -- ' '' z ' i 1- 1 I 1 i Hi I 4'1 7 - - ' z 1 o:i 114'''ll' it: - ':- p - 1 k C: '' t 1 ' L Vi ::'-- : 't ':1 ' 4:t1 e' 5:77: i 1 P7 0 :'' s 14 g 0 ' - le- - ment e - Aisc V Ng o - r r V -- Sm):-'- C - r- - ''r'n t' 74c9T— '( 0' : p-- prs f'p - 6 '- : "- - - " - :V:-- ' 01''' ' S1- vet - :: 0:41'1i'l'- 7 tkite-- - - 1 '' ' :'t' - - ' :"" 1 " ' : ' - - ' ' -- ' - - s ''2 ' " " 4rrs'7"7c' r'' several days ago and had been buried at sea With Rickenbacker when a navy P B Y flying boat found him were Colonel Ha ns C Adamson the pilot and Private John F Bartek Adamson's condition also was described as good but the navy said Bartek was in a serious state presumably from exposure He is expected to recover however Three More Located Meanwhile another P B Y had located three other members of the crew—Lieutenant James C :" 4066k---2 trie-es- ind-rise- lt Arres Ls Bring Jury Declares Six Guilty Absentees to Senate Debate Of Treason -- been done CHICAGO Nov 14 (ui)—A WASHINGTON Nov 14 yet" Tclan said the plan was based —The senate for the first (UP) court jury Saturday night Whitaker Lieutenant John J federal time or a report of shortcomings which he prepared as chairman of the house cornrnittee investigating nail:oral dfenae migration and that it calls for a "streamlined central erov with a man at the top who ean airy 'Yea' or 'No- K!gore explained that the war office would be sort cf A r cabinet" or "super NV P B" over and 'closing the gaps" tziIng between the war production board arn7v navy maritime commission an I procurement staffs thre:ective service war man power eommiesion and other agencies Existing war agencies would not renrgsnized Kilgore said but eproi11 be coordinated under the central war mobilization director rea7oneible to the president euld Ran St Year Men On purpose of the bill Kilgore Pail is tr Zet rid of the dollar-as- : pa r rnen in the government who have been 'saleemen and bankers who know the materot ral men and machines which are the stuff of war production" The rneasure provides that the staff of the proposed office "shall sever all connections and private business hall receive no aalariea or compensations other than those received at ernrinves of the office of war trnaton lend-leas- e ereers rroh-1zation- -- ioint statement said: "Today we have a patchwork marked by constant of production schede:esi hy hoardir g at this plant wh:le that plant goes without materials Skilled rnachine tool builder are betrg drafted while airplane plants wait for machine toKIa We have the war production board unable to find 20000000 tors of ifirt steel 300000000 N1''e pounds of 'mislaid' copper have the arrned servicem and their eontraetors jockeying with each other over rnen machines and mater1 rr-grP- rn hre-ikriow- n r-e7s the face of the African opertioins the W P Ft cannot expect Ye to wait eight months to see whtther or not the new controlled plan is going to work months this war ran h4s won if we tackle now a resolute overhauling of the war production tin a German-AmericaSaturday resorted to convicted six naturalized of arrest to obtain a of the highest crime members—to hear quorum-- 49 United States treason the continuation of what promises to against returned verdict The by a jury be art filibuster to kill and four men housewives bill of tax the pending antipoll eight The action was taken after re- - against the parents aunt and peated quorum calls and appeals uncle and two friends of electroto absent members by the sergenazi saboteur Herbert ant-at-arms had failed to pro- - cuted duce the necessary number of Haupt was the biggest treason senators Those present sat dis- - - conviction in the history of the consolately at their desks read- nation since 1928 out-and-o- ns ut or engaged in whispered conversations with colleagues for nearly four hours before the forty-nint- h member arrived Ingkted on Quorum of the repeal meatstire seeking to delay action had insisted that a quorum be pres- T17 P ent first quorum calls brought only 33 senators to thechamber Appeals by the sergeantraised the totalto 41 still five short of the required number on a motion by Senate Democratic Leader Alben W Barkley of Kentucky the senate Angelus and Staff Sergeant James Reynolds—on a small island in the same general area Their condition was not immediately ascertained but a U S navy medical officer was flown to the island The men will be taken to a naval (cow N "n Pau Column Three ) itilied eve) ment and a $10000 fine at-ar- mid-Final- ) Column One ) Permits Girls 16 and 17 To Work in War Plants U S found that continuation of the limit would "impair seriously the conduct of government business by retarding essential production and interfering with the successful prosecution of the war in which the United States is engaged and which requires the complete utilization of the human nod national resources of the na18-ye- ar tion" The order specifies that the girls may not be employed contrary to state laws governing the number of hours or time of day they may work ly - Ten) Oil I ft U S—(Official) fly Associated Press WASHINGTON Nov 14—Powerful groups of American and Japl anese warships were slugging it nut in the vicinity of the Solomon islands Saturday in an aftermath of a heavy American naval bornbardment of enemy positions on Guadalcanal Both sides have "suffered losses" a navy communique said i would but it added that no details be reported while the battle continues because of the value of such information to the foe' Series of Battles The communique described the battle as "a series of naval enauthoritagagement" This was tively interpreted to mean that the ships of both sides were widely deployed In the Solomons area so that the battle consists of a number' of individual actions between groups of ships rather than a single mass fight It seemed probable that aircraft were participating fully both as weapons of attack and as the eyes of the opposing fleets although the communique made no mention of them First word of the fresh outburst of sea warfare In and around the battle-scarre- d islands — where the airfield on Guadalcanal is the prize which Japan seeks and the United States is determined to hold— come Saturday from Tokyo 3''''t - :1 i ' i:i:T! miiiiibm ::: 11 11:e L (71 i 1 s t I rt l ' t L I ILEt Cir1 G pA R S i ---- t itut i rpVICHY ' i Bay of '' Biscay 1 40 i 1 ft I VT ' f ' ‘ '' - 'e'' '': SRrSW-4111-RCAI- 1 ' MOROCCO' 14179 1 ' :' '' :: : BOUGIE N)iBASTIA - At : tsi-orv-ic" :: :C'--''' :' ' - ) - BIZERTE ::::::: ' TUNIS S : - : - :' '':' JICI:1Y ::: itaiiii ‘A ' - It'-'"--:-t : :: I it :±--'-- I - I ':'-1- 1 1 ' s f f ' i: i I J-!-- ' I I ' - '''- 1 - - LI 1 der only 80 miles from Tunis and that parachute troops were pre- paring to land in the capital East of Bone Authorized from dispatches Lieutenant General Dwight D Eisenhower's headquarters indicated that the main body was somewhere east of the Algerian town of Bone 50 miles from the Tunisian frontier and that it was advancing rapidly with strong naval and air support These reports also said the Germans and Italians trying desper- ately to establish themselves in Tunis and Bizerte before the al- lies arrived were rushing rein- forcements both by sea and air Aerial observation showed that French and German troops already were engaged in fierce fighting through t h e narrow winding streets of the capital and strug- gling for possession of airports 2 ' t42'(zxy -I VV ALGERIA ' i e11711N I SA IV ON TuAns 4 --- "— ::7(11-):-:::'''-'- y-70- N - i thl r"114r 1 SARDINIke: ' tiSFA FORCES CLOSE N ''''' :: BONE:!- S 2 N --4 I - :'''''' : 1ALG IER-ORAN SPANISH MOROCCO (SPicz) ' s:: ' () :: ' ' IS riLII j41Naa ::::: - BALEARIC i 711 coRsic&i)711"- - GIBRALTAR ' ‘-- MARSEIa Y 10URDES y Ts MADRID N ' ee : t LONDON Sunday Nov 15— Powerful American and British forces struck toward Tunis by land sea and air today for a showdown clash with German and Italian troops who continued to land in increasing numbers despite resistance of French fortes reported led by General ' Henri Giraud i of lied 'rhe exact position was not known but vanguard some reports said U S and British ground forces already were pouring across the Tunisian bor- p uotm r I dAr 11::: N 'le I SPAIN :E011M SWITZ111111t" 401 LYON L jiIi r): 11011-f- FRANCE 4 1174114 L Struggle To Halt Influx of Axis Soldiers 300 1 :bap CALMS c1 ' - 0 Blrir: The north African allied drive appeared to be approaching a forces closed showdown Saturday night as American-Britis- h were In on Tunisia while other American units moving into in a nutcracker drive dethe Algerian interior toward Libya battered army Rommel's signed to trap and smash Marshal across Libya fleeing k ' ' 1 - 1 f it - Japs AdmitLossel The Japanese broadcast that they had lost two destroyers and more than 10 aircraft and had a battleship damaged They claimed —wholly without confirmation from other sources — that allied losses had been six cruisers and British---(OfficiBy Associated Press one destroyer sunk 19 planes shot 14—British Nov CAIRO dedown two cruisers and three planes from Malta destroyed seven and stroyers heavily damaged large transports from a formation of 60- enemy planes flying north three transports set afire Tokyo in the past always has toward Sicily Friday after heavily damaging the Tunis airport minimized Japanese losses and while the British Eighth army Contioliel on Page Nine) RAF Guns Blast Seven Axis Troop Planes Out of Sky I i I 1 its outskirts on The Tunisian garrisons which have been fighting the Germans I s for four days areunder the leader- ship of General Henri Giraud the independent French news agency in London reported Saturday night ! Consolidate Positions The American task force mov- ing on Tunisia was reported in a communique Saturday night to be "consolidating its positions" American entering Casablanca chieftioops city of Morocco on the Atlantic coast were reported to have received a friendly welcome Ports and air fields in the western area were being operated by American forces the corn- munique said That Hitler had decided to make LONDON Sunday Nov a serious stand in Tunisia and 15 (X)—The German freedom radio station said early perhaps even was hopeful of form- a junction between axis forces Marshal Nazi ing that Sunday In West Africa' and Marshal Er- Erwin Rommel is "not with win Rommel's Africa corps behis troops He is in Mucame obvious when Jong distance nich" allied pursuit planes shot down The German freedom raseven of a fleet of perhaps 60 axis dio station is one of the transport planes flying northward illegal transmitter a which from Tunisia has often riven trouble to nazi authorities Sometimes Believed on Return Trip the information it broadAs the troop carriers were casts is accurate and its -Irritate thought to have been empty atprograms always the time of the attack military government officials observers deduced that they had supplies to transported men and on the return - for another "completely crippled" because of Tunisto and were Italyand trip vast destruction the capture was known that Germanload It lfght of their materiel tanks had reached Tunisia probof Rommel's 140000 front liners fewer than 20000 were be- ably by air ll Heavy British bombers attacked lieved to remain in the the main Tunis airport for the (Continued on Page Three) t al) - i i I I I z - Anglo-A- merican f Hal) fly United Press LoNnoN Nov 14—Il A mediately apparent did not The communique say whether the planes contained troops as did the transports shot No down earlier in the week formations of axis troops flying south have been reported here although allied headquarters in Alhad landed geria said the Germans light tanks by air in Tunisia was The British desert victory so complete that Marshal Erwin Rommel was believed totally unable to make a stand anywhere in the wide but swiftly narrowing Lan- caster and Stirling bombers dealt Another smashing blow to axis industrial and supply facilities at Genoa Italy Friday night and returned without loss after covering 1200 miles of enemy-occupie- ter- d (Column e) s1 Five) i! t t i c ! I ç 1 1 t Column Two) t r 41 - - I t i - - i i t ' supplies Even should axis forces in Tunisia succeed in consolidating their position and make a tern- -porary- stand against the big perbly equipped Defense day witness and reminder of the great defense army moving against theni- from wasbighly doubtful effort of the people tsiroa years the west iteVer—would they-that join arms now in midst the fall ago phould d army of a great offensive success over with Rommel's fleeing from disaster in Egypt the nazi enemy "While we rejoice in the deeds SpurredL by its commanders GenB tral Montgomery the vicforce and air of the navy army in Africa we remember those torious British Eighth army Inof the demorother days when the deedyof tensified its pursuit on the coastal road civil defenders did- so much to alized Germans - Tobruk in Libya and to victory In- west of(Contin-zekeep our on Paz' Two) vinci bie" tGOiLLMO 01111) t 1 ! - su----- Anglo-Americiu- 4 m - hard-p--esse- - -- - - - - s: ' ' - I 4 - A - -- - :- ! - Irv?! - - - r :0-:-- : - ' i - - third straight night destroying ground installations and large quantities of gasoline and other - - I pell-me- Churchill Defense Day Talk Recalls Nazi Threat of '40 Sunday Nov 15 — Britain recalled Saturday as events in Africa seemed to presage Fin eventful return of the var to Europe that two years ago she stood in imminent danger of invasion Prime Minister Churchill issued the following message to mark Civil Defense day: "It a piece of good fortune it is symbolic that this Civil I ' vise between Gaza la and Tunisia The victorious- General B IA Montgomery said 12 enemy divisions had been beaten so thoroughly they "ceased to exist as effective fighting formations" and that the surviving axis troops were LONDON 1 Gerinan Radio Says Ronunel: Visits Munich chased and hacked at the utter!)! routed enemy land forces west of Gazala 40 miles beyond Tobruk Whether the enemy was trying to rescue the remnants of the or African army shattered whether he was reinforcing his elements in the French protectorate of Tunis which other forces were menacing from the west WaS not im- Column Two) - 1 'I i B ' CHERBOURG-- ritory where defenses were vastly improved the air ministry announced Saturday Direct hits were scored on one of the main targets the Ansaldo enplant which produces warship armanaval and land and gines ments it was announced Large numbers of 4000 and 1000 pound bombs were used in the attack and the raiding crews reported they left a big fire raging in the ruined area The raid was the second within a week on Genoa and the first there since the port attained increasing importance as source of supplies with which to combat the allied threat in North Africa Success of the raiders in returning home unscathed dealt a further blow to German prestige in Italy since it proved the added ment" defenses supplied the areas as the Northeast of the Black sea port result of previous 11 A F destrucof Tuapse soviet forces hurled tion were of slight—if any—value back reinforced German troops (Rome radio broadcast a comdisabling 11 enemy tanks and part- munique admitting that 'considly wiping out or dispersing up to erable" damage was inflicted durtwo companies of infantry—about ing the raid "especially upon civil 100 men buildings in the central and eastOn Friday soviet plAfies operat(- ern quarters of the city" The fvrt Paco Cont inliorl on rnr Cont (Column Your) el 777) ILL 110 el re 6----4- 4s--- Rusian—(Official) By United Pres :MOSCOW Sunday Nov 15 — Fierce battles are raging again in Stalingrad where the Germans at a cost of several thousand men killed in three days have pressed back the soviet defenders "somewhat" in one place but elsewhere the red army is hurling back all assaults the soviet high command announced Sunday Northwest of Stalingrad soviet forces continued consolidating their positions and scouting the enemy's Soviet planes swooping low over the German lines started eight fires in the Stalingrad area In the Caucasus where the Russians have taken the offensive several German positions were occupied southeast of Nalchik gateway to the Caucasian military highways and beat off German counterattacks to recapture them On one sector red troops occupied a river bridge "of great strategical importance" and on another 250 German submachine gunners were wiped out "in a fierce engage- miliadine - ts HES I 9 ENGLAND in imprison-Opponen- i - Fierce Battles RAF Smashes Can Get Death Anew Genoa With the Rage The only crime mentioned constitution treason carries a At maximum penalty of death and a Stalingrad Heavy Bombs minimum of five years' The jury was charged only with determinSentence ing guilt or innocence is left to the discretion of Trial Oudge William J Campbell at 16 the youngest federal judge in the Chicago district Those convicted were three die aged couples all natives of Germany who settled in Chicago and became naturalized citizens to They were: instructed the sergeant-at-arm- s arrest seven absent senators Young Haupt's parents Hans known to be in Washington and Erna his aunt and uncle LuSenator Berkeley L Bunker clue and Walter Froehling the (13)0 Nevada was the first mem- - !latter Mrs Haupt's brother and ber "arrested" He walked into thelOtto and Kate Wergin neighbors m Pa ce Sliteen (Cortinlieel (Continued nit rac Fourteen) Cniumn Two WASHINGTON Nov 14 UPI —The labor department opened the gates of war plants Saturday to girls 16 and 17 years old Secretary of Labor Perkins under authority of the Walsh-Heale- y public contracts act which permits her to exempt age employers from the limit for women on federal contracts dropped the nge requirement to 16 to permit more girls to take their places on the production lines She acted at the request of the war ard navy departments and the maritime commission which De 4 1 ge 1 - death again Others Share Luck Sharing the indestructible Ttict kenbacker's luck in his latest ad'N venture were six others of the crew whose U S army t eight-ma- n bomber was forced down in the Pacific wastes by lack of fuel last October 21 An eighth memse ber of the crew—Sergeant Alexander Haezmarczyk of Torrington Conn—had died in Captain Rickenbacker's little yellow life raft I 0 i t"' ' e : EMI( Bri t :ash Fa ver !verge o n c apt-aFrench - ' s II 4 c aTakino- rt in Sea Clashes By United Press WASHINGTON Nov 14 — Eddie Rickenbacker hex 'Acme it again Twenty-fou- r days after he di'- eaedin the:Routh Pacific on a secret flying mission for the war department the navy announced Saturday that he had been found —alive and in good condition—on a rubber life raft 600 miles north of Samoa The man who drove the tires off racing automobiles as a youth who fought German planes in the first World war when the odds were seven to one against him and only a year and nine months ago survived an air crash which killed eight others ' had cheated S ll - -- 17- Planes Believed World War Ace Companions Adrift 24 Days ) - - w i:: l- 7- I - p sa 'ci- — ' ' - Story i '': i- 41- -- nice want to get from them the estrrplete story of the operations o' the present production procedrPA'' they said in a joint state- i - fr - u" - '"'-- SVant Complete -” - ' PC CaLfornia said executives and pro: duction engineers of 20 corporaI tions with hair th war orders had boort invited to testify at hearings opening Monda:v before a sonata Lab-ounder Pepper's cha'rmanship ' 1 ! ' r t 4 n By Associated Press WASHINGTON Nov 14 Corrressional proponents of sinzle civilian command over all 'war production with its man power problems announced Sattrday a drive to set up a central office of war mobilization by December 7 They declared that the war could be won in eght months by "a resolute overhauling of the war production machine" Senatcra Kilgore (D) West Virrinla and Pepper (D) Florida and Representative To Ian an Captain Eddie Rickenbacker indestructible World war itce picked up with six members of the crew of a plane missing since having gone down in the Pacific 24 days ago while on a flying mission for the army The survivors were adrift in a rubbet raft 600 miles north of Samoa One member of the party had died and had been burled at sea 7 sn 6'T" 1 4 Navy Reports Both Sides And Crew Found 'at Seal Suffer Losses Cal)taill-ilic- z I (k --- 11 I 111P: II L 0 A i I P 1110 ( lit i e 1 1 I -- - f S f a ri 0 w al11 I it irlo I I i ' i - - - ' |