Show - - ' - - - - --' - - ''- - 7-- : -- '' ' '''''7 - T ' '- - r- - ''- - '"-- - - - -i- - ""- -- - - - - - : t i Help Save Meat! J 1 I - 1 '' s d lf 1 ill A Wben you buy that Saturday repotst remember—you will accentuate the meat shortage if you buy over two and one-hapounds per adult per week fl I ' 41 t A --0 rClv - (Zral 1 : 2r j i mottate ' '11'1 - 1:1 1 1' 1 1'L2 : t 1 t 1 1t : ki t 4 '' li-- iP-i vr The Weall:er ' i k2 :Cii):41 41 - 1! i ati uistsr iel 0: na mippo firrsma idmet giy irtaeane is t f key : ysdva: "iusihruot dyr f t ' - Vol 116 No 93 Salt Lake City Utah Friday Morning January 15 1913 !Utah Senate P -- Gets Miners Halt Spread of ren Pro ts ert y Honest Folks Russ Onsurge ii Those $5s Engulfs Six Aren't Phony! More Towns Coal Strike Rights Measure Await Report On Conference Today With WLB Bill Affecting Japanese Ownership Of Land Goes to Chamber Three Additional Acts Introduced' Pa Jan 14 (A)-- A general strike in the Pennsylvania anthracite field scheduled for Saturday was called off ThursA bill to establish real property ownership rights of aliens day night pending a report of a patterned after the California law was introduced into the Utah committee that will meet Friday In Washington with the war labor senate Thursday by Senator board Alonzo F lIopkin (D) Third Rank and file delegates at a The measure apparently aimed meeting of the tridistrict mine committee called to at the issue of Japanese alien land consider the W 113s demand for 1 ownership would confer all the an immediate end to the wildcat property rights of citizens upon of 19000 miners who alstrike all aliens who are eligible for citi had left their jobs adopted ready z(nship under the laws of the a resolution holding unanimously United States Aliens not eligible in abeyance deadline the strike for citizenship under present laws A ommittee of 15 was named 4orientals including Chinese and to carry the miners' grievances to Roosevelt Expected Japanese) would be given the war labor board the same property ownership rights In this state that American citiTo Give Program Assurance Demanded zens are given in the Asiatic The resolution declared that To Public Shortly countries under reciprocal treaties "satisfactory progress" must be I row in existence reported by the committee with Pbevert to State Exclusive New York Timesan assurance that the W L B will Salt Lake Tribune make any wage increase it might The bill would further prohibit t retroactive to January 15 Louis Stark grant fromBy real :corporations owning was scheduled Another a if of the property majority WASHINGTON Jan 14—Presi- for Sunday meeting afternoon to hear the members are individually ineligible to own property and prevent dent Roosevelt is expected to make committee's report from its Washtransfer of property from a citi- public shortly an "American Bev- ington trip Meanwhile at Wilkes-Barr- e zen or eligible alien to an in- eridge plan" formulated by the eligible alien through inheritance national resources planning board where the walkout already in efAny property acquired in viola- and suggestions by the social se- fect his centered officials of some tion of the act would revert to the curity board for an expanded and local unions also decided Thurs'state night to send representatives unified national contributory so day to the W L B hearing in WashingThe bill provides also that in cial insurance system any action by the state alleging It was regarded as unlikely that tonOther- - locals ireliKibility for property owne- Mr Roosevelt pleaded that their would go beyond treasuries were exhausted and it rshp the burden of proving citizen- presenting congress with two the ship or eligibility rests upon the reports for study reserving ape was impossible for them to finance defendant cific until such time trips to the capital Billoi as Three Other he deemed appropriate if eon Vote Plan Dropped Three other bills were Intro- gress fails to act Michael Kosik district 1 presiduced bringing the total number Payroll Levy Hike dent said a proposition to call annow in the senate to seven One k vote in Wilkes-Barr- e other would require insurance companies IThe combined scheme of the two was at Thursday dropped as the organizations regarded organized outside the U S and most because it was denight's meeting comprehensive study ever cided doing business in this state to made on be could gained nothing the subject of soda! sekeep on deposit specified sums w ith the Utah insurance commiscurity in the United States would thereby Kosik said he would go to Wash&oner or the authorized officer of require an increase of at least two ington with the presidents of six aorne other state Companies or- percentage points in the payroll locals in his district taxes levied for unemployment ganzed in the U S are already The two meetings topped off a under a compensation and old age and surHAZELTON Boards Submit Broad Social Security Plan last-rninu- te s Bugg-cotton- back-to-wor- such law Another would the insurance depart- :Tient to destroy records after they :Ave been held in the files 10 Both were introduced by Senator Stanley N Child (D) zinth Another bill introduced by Senkator J Arthur Bailey (D) Sixth vould provide for the subpcna nd examination of witnesses in Timinal eases before filing of a ir omplaint or information obtained during such examihation would not be adrnissible at 1ia subsequent trial except to prove perjury at the examination a uthorize 1 Evi--enc- Aoloilg-nment- s Lknoounee Grant Macfarlane assignments to standing orlim t tees during the brie aftkrnoon Re- an- - i P session The minority ipublicans were given one chairrnzrship and two or three places fin most of the major committees 'I'lle assignments follow: and Agriculture irrigation: ittionzo 'F Hopkin (D Third chair--a- n James A McMurrin (D) kecond Abel S Rich (D) First tore A Christensen (D) Sixth Tenth IcKinley Morrill (R) MeliCh Twelfth 1tchell Kelly (P) Tenth Appropriations and claims: Ira rok Huggins (D) Fourth chair-Ha- n Hopkin McMurrin Child iThristensen Lynne Ashton (D) Lynn S Richards (D) Sixth Eliaha Warner (D) SeyClaude Hirschi (R) EleVtnth r nth Kelly and Ray P Lund (P) i -- linth vivors' insurance At present these 'two taxes together cover 5 per cent of the payroll and bring into the treasury approximately $2225000000 a year The additional 2 per cent tax on payrolls would add $1350- 000000 to social security funds making an annual total of $3600- - 000000 based on 1942 wages Widened Coverage This total however is only a little below the taxes that will be due in 1944 under the social security law unless congress should freeze the present 2 per cent payroll tax for old age insurance instead of permitting it to rise to 4 If' the tax were not per cent frozen there would be in effect in 1944 a 7 per cent tax on as compared to the 8 per payrolls cent in the new calculations made for the widened coverage and extended benefits One of the most significant aspects of the social insurance situation is that the American Federation of Labor is reported to be considering favorably the idea of an 11 or 12 per cent payroll tax shared equally by employers and employes provided the coverage of the present act is extended benefits incerased and that there is added temporary and permanent disability hospitalization a n d other liberalizing provisions mak" ing the law a program together with a postwar demobilization scheme In some quarters of the-- Congress of Industrial Orgairlzations willingness to support an increased payroll tax was expressed if the social security program were expanded in coverage and benefits The A F L which pressed for passage of the Eliot bill last year "cradle-to-grave- (ContInuec1 on Pa re Six) — (Column Five) Head For Of U S Pay-as-You-G- o en -- chairman: Huggins arr MeMurrin Hopkin Niel-e- n Child Rich Morrill Melich Kelly Revision and enrolling: Child 1 hairman Rich Me lich Warner 1chards Rules and contingent expenses: oel Pare (Contineft (Column klr) Fouri o" brain" Other points in the program which Johnston outlined in an address over 24 B S (8:15 p E W T) ii of rapid-fir- e developments by: highlighted 1 A W L B call for union leaders and operators to attend a public hearing in Washington Friday to explain "fully the reasons why are on the anthracite miners strike against the national policy and against the welfare of the nation in time of war" 2 A statement by a spokesman on no-stri- Page Four) (Co)umn Three) (Continued Two Women Die at Hands Of Ax Slayer TULSA Okla Jan 14 (P)—The hacked and battered bodies of Mrs Luzilla Stewart 46 and her daughter Mrs Georgia Green 31 were found Thursday night in bed in their apartment Police Chief George Blaine said the women had been slain with a hatchet or ax The anartment had been ransacked Blaine said He said evience indicated the killer broke into the apartment through- a window Mrs Green is the wife of Jack Green a corporal in the army She has been employed for the past eight years as a law firm sec- retary Her employers went to her apartment Thursday night after she failed to report for work this morning They entered the apartment through a back door and found the bodies in bed Both women were wearing pajamas Their heads were crushed Chamber Calls Taxes NEW YORK Jan 14 011 — Eric A Johnston president of the United States chamber of commerce advanced Thursday night a program entitled "Eight Ways to Speed Victory" and calling first of all for income tax collections on a basis "Adoption of this form of taxation would serve to relieve the worry of millions as to how they shall meet their forthcoming taxes" Johnston said "War imposes enough mental strains and stresses withotit additional burden for the unnecessary "pay-as-you-g- day 1 "Enlist the services of private citizens and business men to assist snore fully in the execution of federal war measures through their trade associations and community organizations" 2 "Stop expansion and creation of additional government bureaus" 3 "Curtail government spend- ing for nonwar and nonessential: and purposes" projects 4 "Preserve small business epMuch more emterprises be should placed by govphasis ernment on decentralization of war contracts" "Relieve the plight of the Our selective service system should more adequately recognize the man power problem of the farmer" 5 farmer Price Five Cents Drive to Seize Rostov Goes Into High Gear 4- 1- By Associated Press By United Press MOSCOW Friday Jan 15 — The red army of the lower Doh throwing its drive toward Rostov into high gear again after smashing through the German defense line captured six villages killed 1000 nazi troops and wrecked '22 tanks Thursday a communique said Friday The Thursday midnight bulletin of the high command also revealed that the Russians had ad- vaneed 12 miles up the Caucasus trunk railway from Mineralnye Vody to seize the town and station of Suvorovslcaya after cleaning out broad flanking areas on either side of the line Near Rail Terminus The right wing of General Ivan Maslennikov's army of the Caucasus struck 35 miles northwestward from Budennovsk and occupied Sotnikovskaya 18 miles from Blagodarnoe railroad terminus 70 miles east of the big Caucasus base of Voroshioysk As Maslennikov's forces on the right neared a junction with another soviet column pushing down from the Kalmyk steppes the high command announced the capture altogether of one district center the railway town of Surovoskaya and three big villages among them Sotnikovskaya h Report The high command did not name the six communities occupied in the lower Don valley Earlier it h on had announced a that front and said soviet shock troops poured through the gap and fanned out to take several villages and many prisoners The red army had been stalled or slowed to a snall's pace in the Don area for some days after a mighty onsurge had carried it within about 60 miles of Rostov A powerfully reinforced German defense line and repeated counterattacks by tanks and troops had Impeded the drive which 71011 was rolling again Break-Throug- bottlenecks—synthetic rubber aircraft high octane gasoline escort ships and merchant vessels Nelson rounding out his first year as production chief told a press conference that during these months IV P B's effort would be devoted to ironing out the competing demands of the various programs for component parts that is valves instruments and other items which are common to all the programs and are scarce r TOlt 80NE : : Liv1Jt fillisimor N 4011r4 ‘ i OrnS: p:- - trA :::: r" em 4 on :::::::::::1::::::-I1:!1:piIiii:ipp- t: 17Azot:z: 4 -- oi :ill!!' -- CI 00 ili c1 sir- - 0to -- -it : 1 vito 10" GADA ' an tut - TACHiUMET-0- y LI -- ----s - I '''' 150 a '''' ti 1 " 4 offensive from checked RomMarshal the westOgainst mel's army in Tripolitania TOGHA I7Tphoertahnet4Ghtaisnsse Li V I 470e gbyainths GATRUN I French forces (arrow) driving northwest of Kairouan Thurs- day had established communications (indicated by heavy dotted line) vith a Frenchc army moving northward in have 'Libya (arrow) from equatorial Africa The British ' The apadvanced beyond Stria toward Wadi Zem-Zeproximate territory in Libya Tunisia the area and indicated by shaded line is Tripoli Algeria ed Allies Storm RAF Plasters Enemy Base Essen With In New Guinea Tons of Bombs Ground Forces Raid Stronghold of Japanese at Mubo Allies--(Offici- al) By United Press GENERAL MACARTHUR'S HEADQUARTERS Australia Friday Jan 15—Allied ground forces have made a successful foray against the Japanese at Mubo seven miles south of the enemy base of Salamaua New Guinea the allied command announced Friday in revealing the first action in that area in several weeks More than 116 dead Japanese have been counted as a result of the raid on Mubo said the midday communique issued by General Douglas MacArthur's headquar- ters In the Sanananda sector of New Guinea 140 miles down the coast from Salamua allied troops are slowly compressing their encirclement of the Japanese who hold the last enemy foothold in the Papua area of the island The latest clash near Salamua which is located on a mile-lon- g peninsula jutting out into Huon gulf appeared to have been the heaviest of the few sporadic actions occurring there since the the Japanese occupied 1942 are in March The last report from that area concerning ground operations was on December 18 when a communiannounced that allied patrols que remainder reported "missing" were maintaining pressure on In reprisal the Italians raided and protecting the villages of Haradra and Gouras enemy outposts in that area natives friendly the next day and shot the mayors of both towns They then took 15 hostages to Lamia 'After a band of guerillas visited the village of Prosilio to recruit volunteers the Italians arrested all inhabitants and deported them to the town of Grvia When a band of irregulars went CHUNGKING Jan 14 (211 — to the village of Panouria for The Chinese high command supplies a carabinieri detachment was sent out to arrest them The Thursday night announced the Greeks however "arrested" the reoccupation of the Honan provItalians instead Another unit of ince towns' of Kwangshan and Italians sent to aid the first also Loshan and declared that Chiwas captured The guerillas later nese troops fiercely attacking released the carabinieri after dethe Japanese within the city of priving them of their uniforms Sinyang and its environs had and books made progress The Chinese communique said Copyright by N Y Times Kwangshan was recaptured JanAdmits Tax Evasion uary 11 and Loshan was taken NEW YORK Jan 14 (T1—Jack the next day Loshan is 28 miles east of Sinyang important JapDietz a Hollywood motion picture producer pleaded guilty anese base in southern Honan an province and Kwangshan is 25 Thursday in federal court to inmils southeast of Loshan indictrnentcharging him with A Chinese army spokesman come tax evasion of $200237 for the years 1936 and 1937 He will earlier Thursday amended Wedbe sentenced on January- 26 pesday night's official announce Lae-Salama- ua rf I -- t 4 ''' ! ' t :' E 4i i 7: - HV:iaeodnubesdaan 1D0'favKoauisrsouaanbo—utwle5remsilaeid spokesman to be important 2 ' - - "The Lafayette escadrille went into actio4 for the first time with French forces" he added referring to the new organization of veteran French fliers equipped with American planes Also in an area northwest of Kairouan French troops took an axis position capturing 80 Italian prisoners after having surrounded an axis group there two days ago A near-b- y Morocco division killed 17 nazis and captured eight in a local skirmish - - Contact Established (British news dispatches reported that contact had been established between the headquarters of General Giraucl the French com- mander in Tunisia and the Fighting French force under Brigadier General Jacques Le Clerc which : is thrusting upward across- Libya Saturation Attack from equatorial Africa (It was added that this liaison Pummels Home —the first between De Gaul lista and Giraud in the current phase of the African war—had been accomKrupp Factories plished by the arrival at Giraud's headquarters of a courier from Le Allies—(Official) Clerc By Associated Press (At the eastern end of the allied LONDON Jan 14 neavy lbattle line Africa allied R A F bombers unleashed a verita- airmen: flying in support of the ble cloudburst of fire and explo- British Eighth army attacked axis airfields near Misurata along the d Essen Libyan coast machine sives upon gunned motor transport in both western Wednesday night in a raid which saw 100 tons Libya and Tunisia bombed the of bombs hit the home city of the Tunisian port of Sousse and damaged a cargo ship off Tunisia Four Krupp works in 12 rrninutes German planes were shot down The British said only four and othefs damaged Eight allied bombers were lost after the con- planes were lost) centrated attack the eighth time Light- Air Activity in 11 nights that the R A F has The day's communique from bombed Germany and the third General Eisenhower's headquarters straight night that the industrial reported light air activity adding Ruhr has been hit one enemy fighter had been - that down shot without allied loss and Bombs of Deluge that two enemy bombers wert deBombs cascadird down at an stroyed Wednesday night d average of eig4t and (Fighting French in London retons every minuti ported General Le Clerc messaged Returning pilc is reported that that his forces had captured more mushroomed large fires quicaly than 700 prisoners and "considerup They said that the German able stores of arms ammunition antiaircraft fire was asviolent as and equipment"—including 18 axis ever and that for the first time tanks and 40 their guns—during encountered in recent nights they drive across the Fezzan area of the nazi night fighters Libyan desert) Nazis Admit Losses The British navy was officially credited at Algiers with successA R F howl the To illustrate just 971 transports has developed the princIple ofg fully escorting vessels toand other ships supply a with target saturating missiles it was recalled taling about 7600000 tons between Gibraltar strait anti north that 340 tons of bombs were African or ports in the last two less in hours three dropped months in the minute tons two than per (Continued on Page Two) Column Three) Ships of Allied Nations These convoys coming from the United States and Britain were made up of merchantmen of all the allied nations American British Dutch and Norwegian craft predominated Most or the supplies landed were utilized by the allied ground and ment that Sinyang had been captured He said that the Chinese air forces in Tunisia and Algeria but there were also large quantiare not in complete possession but are fighting within the city's ties of provisions for the impovwalls after penetrating the west erished peoples At the same time it was said gate that allied naval forces were makThe spokesman said the Chinese had occupied two road funcing sharp headway against in the Mediteranean Sources tion towns above the Yangtze river in Anhwei province These who cannot be identified by name 30 miles said the enemy had lost many subwere Tungchengh north of Anking the Japanese-occupie- d marines and numerous others were provincial capital and damaged British submarines were dean equal distance Tsienshan clared having "no little success" west of Anking The Chinese said "sangui- in attacks upon axis transports is in progress on and merchantmeh moving troops naryYunnan-Burmfighting" a border area and supplies to Tunisia Warships the of all classes these sources said with the Chinese stoutly resisting the Japanese and heavy have averaged 24 to 27 dayscon-a losses being suffered by both month at sea in all weather ditions sides ' 4 - r '2' f r or 1 -4 in'-nor- th t mud-bombe- super-saturati- on 7 7 t t ' e 1 17- one-thir- : death-dealin- 4 Chinese Troops Recapture T fvo Honan Province Cities - -7 - m axis-dominat- wBeosut e MARGA (EL I by the Ficnch—Jebel I PAiLES sress a ZELLA ' "' MURZU -'s i er)ti ste 611:111"1V7:--1- Rib - ------ 7- A -- -- ' BRACHtI twill i : SOCNA FIE sA 1 - -- L I BY A mEs ALGERIA!: 74 11"'it" 1 At - - lik t1 P 4 110 t:t - 1 ' e' '- 11111111111111f1 N5"-YT- ' wFATiMA 1 1 --- STATUTE MISURAT A"hiiik:Iillilliiii 41 - 112 11 Iiii::::54::11!piioLikis1111111111111111111111111111111101111111111111piihil'ill1111 DEHISAT WI liitil I:iitfill al) ALLIED HEADQUARTERS IN NORTH AFRICA Jan IA— A French attack northwest of Kairouan the traffic junction below the eGigehrrntsani: Ttwuonisstdrarot:gie from the mountains a French spokesman anndtinced Thursday Bad weather limited both allied air and ground activity over other o- I fronts - &at:: ear ilasi temporarily :::::? 0 772 TUNIsIA) lej NI By 11P1111!ii::1 1115 II : 4 In 1 Allies--(Offici- h:: :11i:spffill 1''M 0 t f ' ' :i:::!:"ii::i:iiii:iiiii""iiill'IliiiiI1" :Iri:iiint":" t lat Contact in Africa t : -- m11:11 1:!-- F 1- !1111111111i:Hplitiplinifilliall411111111iiiiiiiii qzLTAdi!UIitiH4!!q:irl!4qP"V:PTJW Oy 4KAIROUAN t! ::::t ps:in4!:::::::::!::: ::: :i:::::::i:::iln:H! Mediterranean' !! Sea sii: ::::::duiiii!Iiiii!lomiltiiiiliiliiill!!iiiiiitit! i:i:ii:::fflun0 1!:ii!:i ifirippi!ili CIA' ts H111111 :' 1st - ff-!!- mffillipliiiilailioliiiiiiiliiiiiiliiiipi p1:Hilii::::!:111iiLiiiiii!iiiiiiiiiild'iiiilnilliill:iii!ilq!!!Fi:i” s i"' "iii!:ii' i—iii:111 C: :::4 tpkt De GaulleGirand 11 orces illatte 1i: ?1FYs :t! 11 : eK S -- iii!i!1 r: Hill fy V - fliii I - i710 A ::::::::::::::::::::::::::: :vw-- BIZERTE iHilliiiiHiii!fliiiiii!: :::: irmh -- -- 1 MESSIN 41reSARDINIAI break-throug- Italians Take Reprisals on Greek Villages WASHINGTON Jan 14 up— Chairman Donald M Nelson of the war production board predicted Thursday that the '1943 objectives for all the military production programs could be accomplished The critical period will be during the next four months said Nelson on the "must" programs which currently have the major c! 71-- -- l) WASHINGTON Jan 14—Swift and deadly motor torpedo boats of the 'United States fleet which already have won glory for their ef-a fectiveness again have engaged superior Japanese force and returned victorious They aped out from Guadalcanal Island in the Solomons to meet a force of enemy destroyers steaming- toward the island on the night of January 10 and 11 presumably with reinforcements for the Japanese trying vainly to regain Henderson airfield Slashing 'quickly at the much bigger and heavily armed enemy draft the torpedo boats—the number involved was not disclosed— damaged at least two possibly three of the Japanese destroyers Scored Several Hits Two torpedoes launched from the speeding littre craft found their Stubborn Battle marks in one of the destroyers Far to the north on the central Another went home into another front other soviet forces waged redestroyer Two more the navy stubborn battles with German a hit third Japaported possibly tanks and infantry nese craft "Our troops repulsed all counterThen the enemy fleet composed attacks the Hitlerites and the navy said of "a number of de-- I wiped outbymore than 390 of the about and turned sped enemy" the communique said restroyers" away to the northwest (continlied oti Pace Two) (Column Four) The torpedo boats hardly bigger than a small pleasure launch first gained recognition in dashing forays against the enemy in the Philippine island waters There one group of the boats under the command of Lieutenant Commander John Bulkley played havoc with enemy shipping and scored hits on several Japanese war vessels Rescued MacArthur Exclusive N Y Times-Sa- lt Lake Tribune It was boats of that group which later took General Douglas MacCAM° Egypt Jan 14—ReArthur from Bataan for his trip prisals against whole Greek vilto Australia More recent exploits lages reflect inroads made in the include two assaults on enemy morale °Malian occupation troops forces off Guadalcanal—in one the by Greek patriot activities and little craft were credited with reveal a truly sinister undertone probably hitting a big cruiser in to the otherwise-aeon-11opera peranother with severely damaging a formances of the fascist carabiniert destroyer The navy communique ThursInformation released here by day disclosed that air forces are Greek sources indicates that Italcontinuing the action in the Solo- ian troops often badly beaten in mons renewing assaults on enemy small skirmishes with Greek Installations at Rekata bay on bands strike back at helpless vilSanta Isabel island 135 miles lagers and Greek officials northwest of the Guadalcanal airA patrol of 40 carabinieri enfield Results of their bombing ex- circled by a band of patriots in a pedition on January 13 island ravine near the village of Gouras time were not reported fought for a time but after 13 'Ground forces on Guadalcanal of their number had been killed island supported by air forces con- attempted to flee The Greeks attinued their advance" the com- tacked so fiercely that only five Italians regained their unit the munique added Chairman Sees WPB Success - lc- Hills : IF b1164:"1ji unis En UattIO : Russian--(Officia- Torpedo Boats Put Big Jap Ships to Rout Off Guadalcanal Score StN eral hits Irene Drive Ce n F ro tit strate CHICAGO Jan 14 (INS) —After a flood of inquiries from hundreds of suspicious merchants Captain Thomas J Callaghan head of the secret service in Chicago gave the assurance Thursday that those strange looking $5 bills are okeh The "phony" appearing bills with "national currency" at the top and serial numbers and seal in brown are legal tender all right They are a part of the $660- 000000 the federal reserve banks had printed in 1933 and then stored away Now with a shortage of currency developing the old notes were put in circulation saving some 45 tons of paper and an estimated $300000 for new bills Tiny Craft Attack -- -- r : t : e - k U-bo- ats L f |