Show r rfo$ : : ' - " - - -- e : t 4' - 1 - - t i f - i r ? - - Z he Thursday Morning a t o ' lil U - S Get Big Offensive Vexes Leaders r -- ---' i : ' ' ' : ' ''4 'esteoteiee e eeer - i '"'?Z - ::i !:: 'NA I ::: i:' ::7: ' e:e- - eeeee- f- ' " ' t! ' es-- ? :' :7: eeeeet e -- 39 -- : :: 1 e :e r - le' e :i ':' !: :: ::: '' :':: ' ' i :e leles° ' ' : e s - """tez--- 1 :::: ::: ': 7:': ' ::- :: :: e4: - ' se '' '' see:::s:: ' ' - ' '''s-se - e :- e : -' ' ' ' ' 'r ' 1 ' - - ! i 1 : - :::::: ' eeS:‘ :" ' ' :: e:::- re e 7:c eeee tee'e e - :: -'A 3:-- - ' y1t:7- - " 1 :: - - - - ' - - - 7 - '7- ' '::--- - ' - ' ' J ' :t '' NP- -0- - Kal-she- ' I break-throug- alled ! '1 ' ' 00 I : 1 :: ! I 7: - i ' i' i '' 4 4 e e -- ) e HAPPY NEW YEAR - 1 : - - 1 ' I - - I : - city-and-nig- ht - - 11943 Model) P-3- ‘ s e El-Bab - i i - - ut 1 I ': ' fellow-countrym- I '' I el i 1 A-2- 0s I- : t I i Port-Du-Fa- A-2- 0s Gel mans Slay 1000 0 0 Czechs 4 I s 1 : 1 1 New Miracle Devices ''Spot' calt !: :''' :':' ': 1 2 1 ie::::- - t SSe I ' 1 ' I ' I Standard Oil Compapy of California o - 2 - 1 1 - Stares to Serve You ::- GREENHOUSE 10th West and 5th South UPTOWN STORE 214 East 2nd South i rt----- A le il t?A 4 Zi rj rl I - 11 LI 1 ' 1 i VETTER : ) i:31 For colds' coughs nasal eoneestionmesde a achesget mutton suet base 250 double supply 350 Penetro-modernmedie- I ' - ationin 1I 232 E FourthSouth Si 1 ' se I i : -- ::::::::::::::::::::7:7:::77::::::::::e7:7::: ''S::::':::::':::e'e':':::::::::::'::! ''':::::i:':'Y''::::''s :''':::':'::''' Seeseees::::::::::::::::::::-- i::0:i ::::::::es:e::e:e: '3"- -"- :: :: ' ' ARE DECLARING - j '' S " ':: : ::: I 1 I r 1 I - ' J I i 1 ' i I! 11 1 I MAINSTREET 211 I t Official Watch Inspectors Union Pacific Railroad i I : 11 CREDIT CONVENIENT I e-- :A :::: : : - - - - 1 ' I I ' - - 1 i 1 golealz ::: " t k :: - ' : : t l' :' :: :: - ": : - t 1 - t :::: :: i ee 'e - eet SS ' : : 'see'4''': e :: ::e:::e i:: - - e- wee "ss' eei '' :tee " I - ! de :: : I :::: '::::S::::::::e ::''' : "" i ' : :: z es - ' " tE t ' ? :: ::i:Sei::-:::::- :: ' :' ": : i : :es - ee : - - -:- t : t s :: 7: ' : ll t-- " i f '"e i 1 a ' I RICH BRONZE i 1 1 ' 1 1 Ii ) Ii 12" Proofs Shown In - Sin 25 PORTRAITS Art mount 9" x I 4 Masts oft I 0 EACH of morel ( i This year more than ever before a portrait will be the important link between loved ones Remember your family and friends in this thoughtful way No appointment necessary I TILIE VIE DIVIDENDS receive your dividnd chock today? We certainly hope so o'or on December 31 1942 Deseret Fociral miled to thousands of Inverimiont Mmbrs clovidnd checks This is th 74th their consecutive dividnd more than $2000000 to date proof that Dseret Fedral iis the safe and profitable oge4o for your savings whether in small investregular Amounts or large lump-suAll accolinh Federally Insured to $5000 ments Did - Dealt Jetv'elem - - - - 7i3th : I ' SAVE SAVINGS EARN MORE!" FOR THE I I H ulykthil e ::::: :::-- :: - ) : ill Where to -- i ii One ' :e:: :A::e0eSW:i:: e es- "Here's PROOF - i I :::: 7meeee7:::eee:::e Is"' '- -- I - Wo are willing to adma just as 1 many othor jowelors must that Ii certain item lof morchandise out by Christ- - 1! were all but so will But Evo be amazed 11 mai you at the largo soloction of tho finor 0 things wo do have left—and of that ihvol rTHE DIAMOND" ete ere happy to I say we hove a splondict stock 11 Won't you come in and lot our ll diamond exports help you in lti that will please n choosing ::::H::see'eese ese::s:i::e: ee :::v:::Q::-:z:::::::- 4 e - r: '! you semi-annu- - atzstin-XCliliel- v - 1 i i - m i SttiaiOS !r - i '6' 1:7 5 - 12 DEsERET FEDERAL - — - Nephl L Morris Pres & LOAN LAKE 44 SO MAIN - Joseph 1 2374 Waahington Phone ! i Daily Hours: 9 a In to 4 p m Open Sundays by Appointment Daily Hours: 11:34 a m to 5:30 p rm Open Sundays 11 to 3 ASSOC AVON- e OGDEN CITY South Main St SALT Phone SAVINGS S' e ::e-- :: - PAYS I i I' eie:::::::::e:::i:els:::::ess:-::- ! S MEATS 1 :: I I S :4- 's I ' ! :M:::7:::::::::: - :r:t''''1::-- ' :V: Brown Floral ' :: '::-"- : ' A qbr- -- :: k ' ENSEMBLE ' t I I -: - - - ee::::'es eee "'' :S- eSe'ees"'T war-producti- ' t 70: f: OF TIIE WHOLE FAMILY :::- SY:': ' nkr trribufit CORSAGE !5 t TO IIAVE 11ORTRAITS fulADE 0 ':': ::::'i::I' t If Stocks n4014) az Rata '' i t t ' ' 1 ' - ' Depleted e :ee'ee: eeee-- : ':::::iL::::::r':--!- : i li 4 I ' I I - I — Chile Approaches Break With Axis ' I i - - s - - - hs - : broad- LONDON Dpc 30 UP)—Harold MacMillan Britl'sh undersecretary of colonies Wednesday was named resident minister for the allied 'headquarters in north Africa in a series of government changes none of which involved the war cabinet MacMillan's post is a new one of cabinet rank and he will: be attached to Lieutenant General Dwight D Eisenhower as representative of Prime Minister river Churchill as Robert D Murphy similarly represents President ese Roosevelt 1 An authoritative source explained that MacMillan's status was political rather than diplomatic sinee no government is currently recognized in north LONDON Dec 30 (UP)—Near- - Africa and his job is to cooperate Murphy as political adviser ly 100000 Czechs probably died with to General Eisenhower were or befDre nazi firing squads ' tortured to death in condentration camps during 1942 the Czech government charged Wednesday The appalling record of nazi atrocities a spokesman said is still incomplete but records show SANTIAGO Chile Dec 30 Lfee— that up to December 1947 Czechs had been shot or hanged while The Chilean senate met in closed thousands of others were known session again Wednesday night and to have died of starvation or bru- the proallied newspaper Defensa tal treatment in German con'ten- said it had confirmed its report that Chile's decision to break off tration camps The entire: male population of diplomatic relations with the axis Lidice about 200 men must be already had been reached add9c1 to the toll along with 72- It was reported also that the 000' Jews who were sent to "some break may not be delayed until destination" in the east and whose the return of Interior Minister fate gives rise to the greatest ap- Raul Morales from Washington on prehensions the spokesman said January 10 as had been expected Enemy Bombing Planes ? ed deepened an of in Jap equipment Including three-inc- h naval guns machine guns and antiaircraft guns Severe fighting continued on the dispersal bays of the Buna airdrome now covered with jungle grass since the allies rendered it useless to Jap planes There was bitter fighting also in the Cape Sanananda and Soputa track area strafed and bombed Jap huts and guns on the Amboga P-3- - years ago He and Lieutenant (j g) Ralph F Pleatman 25 of Cincinnati Ohio were with the submarine in all of the engagements The third member of the 'rio Lieutenant Commander Lewis S Parks of Wilmington Del was in command when she sank six of the ships For that record the skipper was twice decorated—first getting the navy cross and later a gold star Except to interject one or two remarks ' Commander Parks left it to these two 'officers to tell their craft's exploits from the day early in the war when: her crew first experienced the Will of sinking a ship and the awesome shock of a depth charge attack until months later when the submarine slipped for home from the very en- tranyce of Tokyo bay The sub got her first target in the southwest Pacific—a big Japanese transport to which were added later a destroyer two patrol boats two tankers an Interisland ship a trawler and a freighter The submarine had been ordered to reconnoiter an Island in prepa- - and ened - - that's very gratifying" It( emphasized Cutter a football and boxing star at Annapolis several British Appoint the right a tank'attack earlier A i d in A ri ca the capture weige resulting On - I B-2- 4s Jap-occupi- I - en - 1 I By Carl J Lalumia U S SUBMARINE BASE New London Conn Dec 9 (Delayed) UP)—Three naval officers told Wednesday an adventurous story of how a single American submarine boldly sank a destroyer and eight other ships some of them so close to Japanese territory that "you could ale— ration for an American raid that most spit on the coast" was to follow days later For five The activities of the underwater sub made careful ob-fighter the trio related cost the days the as her crew itching for Japanese more than 40000 tons servations in ships and several hundred lives action saw imall ships leave the It cost the submarine and her shelter of a lagoon All of them crew only one life but many tense were perfect targets anxious days of narrow escapes "But the skipper let them all go from enemy ships and planes by" said Cutter a bit wistfully which rained shells and depth "figuring that there must be some in that lagoon Then on charges on them The submarine exacted such a bigones the fifth day a big baby came heavy toll that one of the offi- out a transport" cers Lieutenant Slade Cutter of Four torpedoes sank the trawl: Oswego Ill figured that "even If port—four torpedoes that rOared of American daring to they get us before this war is over a were so far ahead of the Jap- thesignal Japanese on the unsuspecting anese now that they'll never catch Island I (Continued from rage One) By Vern Haugland ALLIED HEADQUARTERS IN war with the support of all France AUSTRALIA Thursday Dec 31 and our allies" CIO—Allied planes bombed three Admiral Darlan was killed by assassin Christmas more Japanese ships in Rabaul a The youth was executed by harbor on New Britain island as eve New Guinea ground troops In the a firing squad December 26 after Btma ntrission area drove their claiming a military tribunal !aid he acted without accomphces wedge through enemy territory to that with the sea splitting the thinning Jap He was of French nationalityassertan Giraud Italian mother defenses The newest ground advance cut ed that the present military situathe Buna mission pocket off from tion in Tunisia "is difficult bethe main Jap sector leaving the cause Germany has accepted the in Tunisia and particularly enemy in that area unable to fight because the battle which 'started escape except by sea ago is hardly won Two Direct Hits "These difficulties the British d The attack idnarL have seen the United States forces have been engaged and the British at cent aeyi sr wRabaul Coming ilzapvee sessimenistthem M Dsuorn totfhvinicktorrmv fWroemthsdealyowbye vBe lo7f3 mast heighttn the bombers directly hit two ves- but I believe we all must make the sels of from 8000 to 10000 tons most serious efforts to earn that each with 500 pound bombs set- victory "I'm no prophet I don't say in ting both ships afire Heavy explosions with orange flame and thick how short a time we shall win black smoke followed The planes At the moment I'm speaking of trans- severe fighting going on in which then attacked an 8000-to- n a hit direct Despite French troops are involved And port scoring intense antiaircraft fire from the don't forget that at the present harbor all allied planes returned time I have 50000 French soldiers Another New Britain target the fighting in Tunisia "Those Frenchmen who have Gasmata airdrome was bombed by while Beaufighters raided no modern equipment are facing Portuguese Timor far to the the enemy who has the most modnorthwest to strafe and machine-gu- n ern tanks and planes FortunateFuiloro airfield and ly the American and British armies are helping us They have huts at Betano to General Alphonse Juin given Take Beach Section who represents me there antitank At Buna allied troops took pos- and antiaircraft weapons needed session of several hundred yards for the modern army to fight" -of beach between Buna mission and Giropa point Patrols had taken this sector a few days previously but withdrew because of inabilify to suppott their positions sik-Lwee-ks ees' e Yanks Smash mhed Pounds 'Arhily Anew at Jap Axis Lines in Tunisia Supply Lines ' 1 4 s ? ' :' 'S':t'7:::-'for the move and officials at the I i!) ' ' ''' ' ' n el' Chinese embassy declined to com- t ' — eseeeee ': 0 S'11z:e:7 7eS4 e ment - ":eSes !:'-::' ' '' ' :' ' Another Chinese source whose ' ' ' ::1: eele-::- - :'::''els ::4'n:resI7' e'ers7Ie -':e? 2' : ''''' ':" ''' -name cannot be used said there ' — ' was dissatisfaction in ALGIERS—A pattern of antiaircraft and tracer first air raid on the Algeria city Some damover what it considers Chungking the minor across bullet is fire streaked the night sky age was caused but casualties were slight role assigned to China In allied to over is a British official photo This Algiers put up fight off the enemy's strategy and over the apparent imof General t to inability Hsiung rress China's viewpoint on military authorities here The same source said Hsiung and his colleagues had reached the concluon that there was no likeIthood of a large-scal- e offensive agaInst Japan in the near future and that the outlook was for continuance of guerilla-typ- e warfare said mines which had bothered the (Continued from Page One) in the Pacific as well as in China British pursuit of Rommel were U itself problems of the allies in Libya thinning out as the Eighth army k Madam Chiang this and Tunisia By Associated Press presses on after Rorrunel's rear informant said still was hopeful However these advices 30— Dec Britguards WASHINGTON the hurt by Although badly of enlarged allied activity on the were proceeding said British the h at El Alamein cautiously Smashing anew at attempts to ish far eastern front and was I as saying she would not goquoted harto in nicked and supplies home bring Japan's deeply again after El A British communique ‘ from until the Burma road was re- assed forces In the Solomons Agheila it was Cairo said British patrols Tuesday opened Madam Chiang arrived in United States planes twice bombed by observers here that Rommel destroyed some of Rommel's vethe United States several weeks and strafed still has a heavy weight of men hicles west of Wadi Bei El Chebt cargo vessels and ago with the announced intention and sank twoenemy tanks somewhere a gulch 180 miles east of Tripoli of them the navy of undergoing medical treatment reported Wednesday The latest official report tendOther Cairo reports said a solThe enemy cargo fleet was lo- ing to confirm the widespread itary torpedo launched by Malta-base- d was pushing naval aircraft struck an cated at Wickham anchorage on belief that Rommel Wins Election the southeast coast of Vangunu through seeking a junction with axis supply ship off Pantellaria island in the Georgia group of the General Walther Nehring axis Island Monday and blew her up in In eWright Plants Solomons approximately 160 nau- commander in Tunisia was Tues- a cloud of smoke and flame rising tical miles from Henderson air- day's communique telling of a suc- 5000 feet An escorting destroyer PATERSON N J Dec 30 UP) field cessful attack by American planes was attacked by other naval toron Guadalcanal—presumably —The C I 0 has won the right to on a long axis motor column west pedo planes but her fate was not the for American air of Tripoli and moving westward represent production workers in attackbse merchantman was reported The ' five New Jersey plants of the But the big questions in London believed to have been carrying There was no clue in the navy's Wright Aeronautical corporation communique as to whether the were how far toward such a ammunition Malta-base- d after a long struggle to break the cargo vessels were accompanied by merger Rommel had gone whether medium bombers hold of an independent union Tunis and bulk of forces had battered his the inMonday was nor night already there any The results of a collective bar- warships shifted to Tunisia or if not how Sousse At the latter Tunisian vesdication other whether enemy this might be done gaining election conducted by the sels were driven away port hits were scored among national labor telations board were and along the north shore feasible avenues The for The only occurred attaciki and theTuesday heavy equipment are the motor barges announced by NLRB Field Exreport roadaminer John J Carmody cathie in on the heels of informaalong the Mediterranean and ALLIED HEADQUARTERS IN '' tion from a coast guard officer the sea NORTH AFRICA Dec 30 (A— back front Guadalcanal that Dangers of the latter were well United States and British bombers just the Japs there "now have all they demonstrated by the heavy toll of and fighters braving violent eleccan do to combat starvation and axis ships taken by the allies in trical and rainstorms and severe this area in the past few weeks disease" icing conditions have continued e The highway also is growing their Commander Dwight H Dexter assault on imas portant German communications 41 the coast guard officer told constantly more dangerous because lines and troop concentrations in reporters that the Japanese were Tuesdays raid illustrated the narrowing axis-hel- d territory Tunisia it was disclosed Wednes"very rapidly deteriorating"—evi- cnakes dence which seemed at least parpossible an overlapping of day fighter attacks tially supported by details of re- allied Flying Fortresses with Lockheed The slight withdrawal of allied 8 on escorts bombed the harbor sumption of ground fighting r forces from footholds upon a and docks at Sousse Tuesday but Guadalcanal were hampered by icing conditions Wednesday's communique said ridge six miles northeast of Medjez-announced by the al- which- compelled one bomber to American forces on December 27 killed between 155 and 165 Japa- lied command Tuesday was not turn back after one crewman on or horn- - nese NO jingle-bell- s the pilot's orders e had bailed out destroyed an enemy mortar regarded by observers as serious IN blowing Was seen as fur- over friendly territory spirit but With and wiped out a machine gun posi- In itself But it sober-side- d tion U S losses were only tour ther evidence of what the allied (This reference was not further recognition of the men command has been emphasizing explained but the bail-oone killed and wounded order Caliahead trials Standard of right along—that the axis is might have been intended to lightfornia wishes you a happy 1943 strong in Tunisia and is prepared' en the bomber in the hope it could to fight to the last to save its then proceed on its mission) Canadian This we are emboldened to do Magistrate final African foothold thereby attacked bridges Douglas because we know how hard hills Suicide Rumors delaying as long as possible the at La Bencha north of Sousse day when the united nations would and also bombed an enemy tank in this your be nth position to strike into Eu- depot southeast of t111-OTTAWA Dec 30 Ont Company are working to make which had been the target of a Glenn Strike Wednes- rope from the south Magistrate 8 Unofficial reports from Libya that wish come true attack earlier in the day convicted Wilfred Bertrand of day ' Ottawa of violating defense of Canada regulations by circulating reports that 17 members of the Already during tempestuous women's 'division of the Royal 1942 these thousands of StandCanadian air force had committed ard men and women have suicide during 1942 Flight Lieuteiliant A R Gunn brought closer the possibility RCAF casualty officer testified — of a happy 1943 rooms In one of the plants of by licking DETaorr Dec 30 l2T1—One there have been four deaths inmodof of instruments the latest the Ford Motor company they ' oilfield In after two womsuicides in the giant giants cluding autowhich are being put together and even ernized the warfare laboratory and refinery aboard en's division since it was founded mobile industry is undertaking machined largely by younk to adapt to production line astanker train and truck their Kearns Hears Oratorio womep Many of the girls are is the delicate out of the universities and sembly processes just achievements make ours a fightin' have master's degrees in matheand highly complicated device KEARNS—Officers and enlisted r and producing-enation g-er matics men of the army air forces basic by which the fire of antiaircraft The instruments are machined against enemy bombers training center at Kearns were batteries one ten - thousandth of an to Is with lethal developed being a at guests Tuesday night repeat Inch have own oraaccuracy Among the rules in the diA With your R Gaul's of eyes you presentation en rector device calls The the torro assembly division are stiparmy "The Holy City" presented antiaircraft director- - to an obseen something of the awful ulations against nail polish of students school the Granite by wrench Pearl Harbor brought server whose mathematical relong finger nails and uncovered district hair Experience has shown acsearch may have ended with a to the whole oil industry But to company officials it of trigonometry smattering sording dont forget one other thing looks like "a box the interior that a bit of nail coatin— - a bit at the of which seemed to have been of nail itself or a strand hair morning Entared ee!121uorries at Salt There have been many indusLake City as second thouso fine as to be almost in sible a of works with filled the matter under act of March 8 1879 tries that have shifted entirely class If meshed in the delicate gears sand watches all 'jammed in and rates: SubscrIntion Utah Idaho Nowill throw their calculations n down and the lid buL the oil yada Sunday month to stamped daa4oar:ind wyvx In 112: elsewbert S105: cir '1" awry R U In 25 month $I daily and Sunday industry had to manage vast 1 t with unerring accuracy — w a r production in addition the instrument performs in five seconds mathematical calculaa N EW tions which would take a score In Order and Shoulder Hair ifAi? of the most proficient matheYet the oil industry has de41 to Give maticians several hours to work stet:eet : livered the goods to keep the Our out Through the determination of horizontal and vertical dis(51 4' Armed forces going—and the Employes tance and speed of the oncoming a Three- IL heels of production too Be- ' planes it dictates the exact inI 1943 'Day stant the antiaircraft guns must cause we know personally the Different and attractive and be fired the spot— precise and the proghazards overcome New Year's Holiday five miles up—where perhaps shall designed by Salt Lake's ress made in 1942 we have confire the converge ' OUR MARKET WILL BE most popular florist So delicate is the assembly fidence — and to spare — for ' it direétors on that work the CLOSED ALL DAY Ordar Early and Ractiva a 1943 We pledge you 365 days must be done In Boutonniere FRIDAY AND SATURDAY Complimentary of effort to better our best— a new our share toward happy January 1 and 2' COLOSsMISRIES ' year for all Americans I re re - i:::1 I il 1 " :: Former Annapolis Athletic Star Recounts Anxious Moments Escaping Japs' Depth Charges - ' ':' '''''' :'"' ' ' ''' S'' :: ': e: : :' ::' : :::- '' 1 - :f- ':::: : eess Sell'e-7:- - i2g4 1::: !::kl: :': e-- s r I eel: ::: ' Pocket Foe at Buna - :i':A ' :- :: yo ::' i71::e-:': '' ' :::'"':t's-:- - : For Third Time : '' r :: : se-- :i 'i $ '''' 11 t : :7- '''t1'-'':'''- : ' : -!i ''' e:'' :el' ':::' ::::'''':':::''' I :: ":4 i - :: :e :: ''' s' ': 7:?:-f- :::- - :::: ':':: ::: '' ' - ::i e:: ::: :' ' ': i:: ::: e :: ::: :' " ' :: :i ''iA :7 '':::' :: ': ': :: : : - :: s'::'-- : ::::--::- 1 e- : ::: : - ::C' :' e: - 1 t- I - Generall American Envoy on List of Intended Victims Allies Raid Rabaul ”: - r:: :' ' e- '''T''7:'74-':'- ' :: ''' :::-- eNe-i--s''- 1 i X ' In Jap Harbor In Death Plot ''' ' 31Ii ''':-i'-'--''''-- :: e: ::'s rr" '' ::! : i i:f::::: :: - -- ' ' ! : z r'- ' ' - :r 4- :i-!- 47:'- ‘t ' - : ‘ ' : 'Y ' ?5 ::ir - ' 1 : I :: 1 - : - Ie"e e S 'eke' e:- ee ' '1 ':' '7c ' stts':tstl:: ''‘':e:":eI7: ':5::ve '::::"-'- - :' ' :: -- :::: :: - eseee-See-:- "' ::: :7'i: :A - ' : ' '' ' ''''''''''''!---''''C'''-- :::i ss:::- ' A os ''‘:k: :::' :zee 1 The spokesman gave no reason rski-:c:-- :: ::i e i'el5 : ':' '51 ''' ''''''q:: ::---- fv ' it '' A '':':'-'''"' ::::::-- : k :- - eeee e '''' 7' '' 7 f!'-- ' ":--:- :': ":: - 1 : 2:4'io'----:---:$:'i‘!---'- - - ‘- - es:fle:7'e:' - ' '! sfN king At the offices of the military t missiom a spokesman confirmed thatGeneral Hsiung Shih-fe- i head of the mission had received in- t structions to return to Chungking i: but added that no date had been set for the departure l' - i v : - -- Kai-she- 1 i - - 'S'"'---- '' 4 : tee:"x WASHINGTON Dec 30 UPI — k Generalissimo Chiang ordered has the Chinese military mission here to come home It was disclosed Wednesday night and reports were current in Chinese Circles that the move grew out of serious dissatisfaction in Chung- - ' - : 1:-:-t- c '!- s ::- 1 - 4'' :: ' ' ''''4 :'4 " ' 4 : z:-:- ' ::' - ‘ --- 1 ! !: - ''' :r: :1'- :::::::-'!::':--- i ' '' '" rr '' :re I '' :7 1 Failure to Start 1 1 : - ::: Decemlei 31 1912 Aidesi A c - - z 47tibune Blaze as Algiers Fights Air Raid Bombers Blast Girand Orders Navy illfwers Tell Story r7777::''747'77T77:777777"---"- ' 12 Arrested Three Ships Of Daring Sub's Exploits '' '' i:-- I Call to CHma ' 'all'e 5:111t1 -- i 1 E Secy I : -- e i - - - r 4 - - r - i - ::: I - : : F - |