Show - Don't Itiv Needlessly LJiT you need for Buy what daly needs and only for d3ily reeds There is enough for everyone if you buy—and eat—sensibly food 0ft LL r Wg-r"1 z IL The Weather 1 2 1117 t v ! i !1 1))i 1 I - r--- 1 A JJL Se Bill in House Would Hike Utah Age Aid u ansp(Q)13--- 117M (Aeai : — S L Man Among' Dutch Guiana Crack-UVictitns -( p — — PARAMARB0 or 4 1110Nammtr" 4 WASHINGTON Jan 21— cc e Thirty-fivmen were killed C:) ) when a huge American trans- C port plane bound for Africa crashed on the desolate coast of Dutch Guiana in South America the war department announced Thursday ' It was the worst disaster in American aviation history Never t : before had a single crash cost so e ' -- '- i 4 '- - ' ' 'Lef '' 10 1 1 ' ' ' ' N''''Onvoix ' 74 411110011011106 1111111100041114 ION - 7'-- -------- --- ----"-- Pi 11101 Mil i "ZI: I t 1 I For Salt Lake City and vicinity: Windy intermittent light rains and little change in temperature FriMaximum day temperature Thursday 57 degrees minimum temperature 45 degrees (Issued by permission of military author- 1 I -- t 1 11 ' 1 ' ! k I -' te4--- ' V Z ' y iostijor4"z 'Amtio i i - 4 I ': : 7 ' e :' I- 4 -s 't ' BRAZIL --: 4- 4 Tee t ' ':1' - ' A 4 ' ' 'N from 01t '''''''''' ' :'" ' ' William Hodson New York t ) ''' 0 - ' r ' ": city welfare commissioner who rewas going to north Africa as 'Atft lief dire-cto4 ' ' Aboard were 17 United States overseas rmv officers bound for j PtItIons six civilians in addition to those named and nine members ' ' of the crew The ship flying south crashed on a remote section of the Guiana coast- last Friday killing everyone 1 aboard The news was delayed because of the time required to reach the scene and determine the extent Map shows Dutch Guiana where giant American transport r'4 the casuelties and then notify plane crashed with death toillof 35 including First Lieutenthe next of kin ant Charles W Campbell of Salt Lake City inset Cause Not Known Major General Harold L George commandIng general of the air ITV transport command who made the announcement said the cause of the disaster was not known hut that an army board was investi U-bo- at i: 4 '''-'''- '' Al- fs - - r 4 1 - N : 1 ' 5 '4 ) I I P B Appealsiloover Points 'For 2000 to 1To Threat of Di"-zn West Coal US Food Crisis f gating -- I rnlAtht add" he commented 'that the pilot and crew were :lost about thP best in the business- The type of plane was not di s- closed but it was apparently one trans-Port- s of the new was and unquestionably larger than the DC-3- 3 commonly 'used by Urjted States commercial airr-ineceomvhich normally modate 21 passengers The plane laas operated by a commercial airline officials did not identify on of those serving the air tr2nsPozt command on rezular throughout the world The percentacze of losses on thee contract lines has been ex tremely low George noted al- tliotrzrh as larger nlanes come intol-taerice the fatalities from inch- v:17111 crashea will mount - 4 1 (1741r i wr Iv 3 C to resident Offers Program to Aid Farm Production Send - Ex-- ! 'Milers to Utah W VOIlli ll"ml O regon ed s o WASHINGTON Jan 21 CP- I-The war production 'board called on the war man power commission Thursday for action on a request by Solid Fuels Coordinator Harold L Ickes that 2000 coal miners be sent into fivefar western states "critical situation" relieve there Englishman1 The apparently unprecedented who served wit the Princess Pats call by W PB followed an appeal of Canada in the last war was a to its labor requirements commitior in the spepial services di- rtion of the American army an1 tee by Ickes' associate deputy T had done much work on military J Thomas whocomplained he had Knicht motion pictures He and Cantain Basji D ateds1Ferdinand Eberstadt program GPI:at:her former N'ew York vice chairman of W P B released another victim a letter to W MC Chairman Paul newspAperman were on a special mission for the V McNutt backing up Thomas' aervices of supply Gallagher had contentions that: world on the army newspaper I Wastsington Oregon Utah Tank n and Wyoming coal needs have addition to "This Above All" come "critical" because of a lack poignant novel about a British or man power although the north-arm- y deserter Knight WRS well west and Rocky mountain states kovvn Rs the author of "The Hap- could produce enough coal to meet py Land" The flying Yorkshfre- their netds they had sufficient man" and other stories His hoioe experienced if miners wes Pleasant Valley Pa In addition to Foxworth whom Coal Hauled Far D:rector J Edgar Hoover called 2 It has been necessary to sorrowfully "one of my most transport coa all the way across assistants" Harold D taie country eapabe Pennsylvania fl F B I agent froin arra West liaterfeld Virginia to meet the Buffalo N-also lost his life fuelneeds of these states laying The two were on a specinl mission a burden further already hard- tczether which the F B I would worked carriers on Thomas 'which nrs detail but in view of Haber"stupid and silly" fela's backrround they prestimUpholding Thom'os' statement abv were bound for north Africa that the- situation terluires of State Hull exof pressed regret over the deaths of minersminimum to- - Washingto'a 350 to Hodson and Oamon E Henryson to Wyorninz 250 to of his department in the disaster' Utah 450 on Page Four) Conti ed siorna One saying' that they "died in the performance of their duties and have been added to the list of those other Americans who have riven orkii-te-n their lives for their country" - war?' be-I- "The larger problem which confronts us" the former president said "is that since the last war American livestock has decreased in proportion to the growth of human population Build Up Flocks "At the end of that war we had 28 per cent more beef cattle for each 1000000 of human population than we had 23 years later on January 1 1942 We had 26 per cent more hogs in proportion to the population We had proportionately 5 pqr cent more mulch cows than now But the modern cow gives more milk We have in 1913 about the same sheep proportionately as in the last war We have less chickens in propor(- i - send-Secreta- ry Continued on Faze Four (Column Four) - IT NEW YORK Jan 21 1A1—Former President Herbert Hoover declared Thursday night that we are exporting less than half the meats and fats to our allies than we did in World war I and yet are facing a greater shortage of these commodities on the home front than we did then In a prepared address before the National Industrial Conference board broadcast over N B C Hoover urged that we envisage agriculture as a munitions industry Larger Problem He listed the shortage of farm labor the methods of food price control and the 75 per cent reduction in the manufacture of farm machinery as blockades to possible increased production necessary to support military operations and to aid in saving "the world from anarchy after the -- sought action from W 31C since last summer but so far had "ob- tained little or no relief" - Complete Final Link Oil Pipeline WASHINGTON In First teutenant Peter D COTVIt:r1 rft 13e Three) 1Coiums 11 0) NORRIS CITY III Jan 21 In speeding the mammoth 1 ixas-to-Illinois ki—Laying of the worlds largproject workest oil pipeline—a 551:111e 24- men at times reached a daily inch conduit from LonAyiew in average of about six miles of the east Texas oil field to Norris pipe and set a record of 993 miles in One day City—was completed Thursday as one of the biggest transportaThe line cost $35000000 and will have a capacity of 1600000 tion projects of the war e Construction crews rushirlg barrels It will deliver 300000 work because of the eastern oil barrels of crude oil daily to rail finished the job in less tank cars here for transshipshortage than aix' months bathing mud 4i:' ment to the east By shortenhrig and swollen rivers Floodwaters - the present shuttle of tank cars of the Mississippi tore out 600 it will make possible a net increase of 120000 barrels daily feet of pipe last month before in east coast deliveries Partly the river crossing was made with new and heavier steel as easing a difficult transportation the last link on the line problem Jan 21 tri---- Te war list department issued the fol 'Thursday of the 35 Iwing dead in Ue aft transport crash in Dutch Guiana January 14: Mijor Eric M Knight Pleasant Valley la Captain Basil D Gallagher Plainfield N J Captain Albert L Seeman (Mrs E:izabeth G Seeman wife) Seattle Wash First Lieutenant Charles W : Campbell (Mrs Euth N Campbell w:fe t 260 Glenmare Ptreet Salt 1 Lake City Frst Lieutenant Donald C Marq 1 tin Ann Arbor Mich -- Earng- day-to-da- per-tecipie- nt Patterson Sees Russ Huiling Nazis Far Back -- -0 I I I 551-Mil- e - : construction Vets Say Union Rule Held Up War Supplies 2-- (JP)--T- - l Allied Forces Sink Five In South Atlantic in It1011th Book-Cadill- ac one-tim- t N: ' Allied Planes Warships Blast Boats Trying to Evacuate Portion 01 Rommel's Arniy Says Madrid t - ' Allies (Official) By United Press LONDON Jan 21—Madrid dispatches said Thursday that axis forces were evacuating flaming Tripoli by every available small boat and barge under heavy attack from allied planes and warships in a minor Dunkirk which was expected to culminate la fall of the city within a few hours There was no official confirmatiort here of the sea evacuatiorlt and the Madrid reports quoting - - Russians Take at an Algeria Caucasus authority Earlier reports had that part Erwin Factory City shal rika korps westward a Voroshilovsk's Fall Kills Nazi Chance Of Stand in South -- - sc'-edul- es on Special Mission ance grants which likely would add $2000000 a year to Utah's 4 relief costs if enacted was introBy Associated Press duced in the house of representaWASHINGTON Jan 21—The fighting marines who wresttives Thursday The house also received a bill to ed Guadalcanal from the Japs back in August and hung on to ease the burden on income taxthrough five months of bitter fighting now payers by increasing the exemp- it triumphantlyover to the army officials announced Thursday have turned it tion on single persons from $600 to $800 a year on Inarried persons The navy in a unnmunique:and Undersecretary of War from $1200 to $1600 a year and on P Patterson at a press conference disclosed that hard-bitte- n each dependent from $300 to $400 Robert Major General Alexander A Vandegrift of the marine The old age assistance bill would Increase the maximum grant from corps had turned over command to Major General Alexander $30 to $40 a month and limit the M Patch Jr infantryman with 29 years of army deduction of other income from service the grant to cash income At the Patterson forecast additional hard fighting saying that present time such things as free shelter commodities of various "while our- - position in the Solomon islands has materially imkinds which might be received and board and room paid by relatives proved it is probable that the Japanese will make further efforts to recover lost territory there" are deducted from the grant He paid high tribute to those dogged leathernecks who batVould Affect Thousands day and night for months against the Japanese Now they If the bill were enacted it would tled d rest—and laterthere will be other route to a are en mean that practically all of the 15000 or so persons of 65 years hostile shores to win of age or over who are now receivbattle of GuadThey spent more time in the ing old age assistance would claim aleanal than ever was y in fighting by any spent the $40 maximum Old ag'e assistAmerican unit navy men believe The first division of the ance now costs between $4000000 and $5000000 a year and takes A E F spent 223 at the front in the first world war but that half of all state relief funds time included a training period and some battle lulls A recent state welfare departBut there had been few lulls for the marines since they ment report showed that in June 1912 the average payment per re(Contlnued on Page Two Column Four) cipient of old age assistance in Utah was $2707 eighth highest in the United States No state gave $40 the highest being $3647 in California Under the present social security laws the federal government will match state and local funds up to $40 a month of old age assistance Sorenson's Name Leads The first name on the new bill Forecasts Retreat Ground Forces Mop Li that of A SorRepresentative enson (D) Salt Lake who for a To 'Winter Line Up in Downpour number of years has been active in the Townsend old age pension On Dnieper River Around Sanananda Others are Mrs Jean' organization Z Murdock (D) Davis Mrs C L 11&WASHINGTON Jan 21 Jack (D) Salt Lake S W ElaU wood (D) Veber Val IL Cowles The surging Russian offensives By Associated Press (D) Carbon and J M Bell (D) from the Baltic to the Caucasus ALLIED HEADQUARTERS Salt Lake The income tax exemption bill IN AUSTRALIA Friday Jan 22 may hurl the Germans back halfwas introduced by Representatives —In two way across the Ukraine to a win widely separated attacks ter line along the Dnieper river Quayle Cannon Jr (R) Salt Lake on Japanese ships allied bombers Clifton G M Kerr (Ft) Box Elder of War Robert P Mr Bell Frank J Mozley (R) Thursday hit a cruiser and at least Undersecretary Patterson forecast Thursday Salt Lake and Thomas M Rees three merchant vessels while In a general review of the war (D) Salt Lake in pourforces ground operating A bill pponsored by RepresentaPatterson found the outlook "de- tives Mozley and Cannon providing ing rain continued the final bitter cidedly bright" for the united na- stages of mopping up around San- tions on all battle fronts the con- that the season for elk and ant hunting and for fishing pheastinued Russian successes being shall ananda start on Saturday instead of SunThese a cruiser was "particularly heartening" Ambon harbor At war of the other day W3-- 3 passed by the house with left global phases and smoking heavily also were discussed only seven dissenting votes The and alisting by the under- 5000-to- n was merchant ship bill has been hotly opposed by sevsecretary: eral sportsmen's organizations and hit by a formation of Liberators nos' has Ship a heavier "no" vote in the house all of which returned after down- passed the rate of sinkings by ene- was expected two out of 20 Japanese fight- my submarines However German Mr Moz ley said it is the opinion ing underseas raiders continue to take a heavy toll creating a heavy of the sponsors that more persons ers and damaging others At least two other merchant drain both on ships and supplies would be benefited by Saturday (Continued on Faze Six) German Feild Marshal Erwin were damaged in a raid on vessels (Column Three) Rommel's forces apparently intend Rabaul to abandon Tripoli without a ma- On the fighting front at Sananeffort to defend the Libyan anda New Guinea where isolated jar the advancing Brit- capital against ' pockets of Japs still are holding ish Eighth army and "it would out 150 of the enemy have been seem very plain that the fall of slain Tripoli is only a matter of hours" In Tunisia there has been a lull "Our heavy bombers attacked enemy shipping in the (Ambon) in ground fighting due chiefly to harbor scoring hits on a cruiser bad weather but considerable air and a 5000-to- n merchant ship" activity has found the allied planes the noon communique stated still maintaining a 1 combat ad- AKRON Ohio Jan 21 he list- - vantage over axis aircraft was seen "The The cruiser last Beacon Journal in a copyrighted been aiding smoke French forces with have ing pouring heavy story quotes six Guadalcanal vet- out Our aircraft were intercept- materially on the Tunisian front erans as declaring that the civilian 20 enemy and political troubles in north crew of a merchant ship two miles ed by approximately and two and Africa "have in no way inter- shot down fighters off the island declined to land urAll our planes re- ferred with the military effort of others damaged gently needed supplies on a Sun- turned" the French against the common day because of a union regulation New Britain medium enemy" The men had worked two hours andAt Rabaul bombers General Douglas MacArthur's swooped low Saturday afternoon then laid off over heavy in New Guinea have almost forces before dawn the harbor until Monday morning and ailing one of 6000 completed the Papuan campaign Two merchant ships marines had to take over the Sun- tons the other of 2000 were dam- in which the Japanese army of day operations the Beacon Jour- aged the communique reporting about 15000 men was almost an- nal said it was informed adding the larger ship was so badly nihilated Allied loses have beenthat its story was cleared for pub- mauled that it was being beached comparatively small with prelimilication by the office of censorship Ambon is in the Dutch East In- nary indications that Australian The newspaper said a navy pilot dies group between the Celebes casualties were somewhat greater who survived the aircraft carrier and northwestern New Guinea It than the American Wasp termed the merchant ship is directly north of Darwin In his analysis of the campaigns Incident the "worst scandal of the At Sanananda where 10 inches Patterson said the evident hope war" The pilot declared the crew of rain fell in one day "our forces of the Germans was to establish would not unload the supplies be- are rapidly destroying all enemy a winter line as deep in Russian cause of C I 0 national maritime resistance" --territory - — as possible union rules against working on Sunday the Beacon Journal added Three marines two sailors and El-Bo- ats the navy pilot all told the same story on individual visits toAkron the newspaper declared Names of the PiX were withheld at their request were sunk by Brazilian RIO DE JANEIRO Jan 21 UP1—Allied forces on the offenair forces the most recent about three months ago sive in the south Atlantic have Bellboys Walk Out Some observers here considsunk five axis submarines In the ered that Admiral Ingram's dislast month Rear Admiral Jonas Dislike Collars H Ingram disclosed Thursday closures were timed with Chiles of relations with the DETROIT Jan 21 UPI—Fifty bringing to 10 the announced toaxis to give that coastal nation bellboys walked off their jobs at tal of undersea craft destroyed assurance that the axis submathe Hotel Thursday In the bittere war in these waters because one explained they were The rine depredations were being at Annapolis foot"sick and tired of wearing wing ball star now commander of the least partly countered Chile which severed relations with collars" united nations naval forces in A hotel official said the men the axis Wednesday has a long the south Pacific announced at a press conference the sinking and exposed coastline returned to work 20 minutes later Within the last few days many still of thefive submarines in the last survivors of submarines have "We may compromise later" he month Brazilian Air Minister been captured on Brazilian soil said "It's really a matter of Joaquin Salgado last year prenear the coast dickies anyhow not collars" viously had reported five sub Allies Blast Jai) Cruiser Cargo Vessel t f well-earne- ' : tritish - b Leathernecks Turn Over Guadalcanal to Army assist- e t Sea 1illy 11Etnet 9 Tri-71 ld N A old-ag- A )tis FJ'eé: As t ities) s - z Price Five Cents -- - VC ' it t 4) I G-m- an ' : kr P E Foxworth crack ho worked on the Lindbergh of kidnaping and the round-o- p the eirht naZill who came ashore WWb A bill to liberalize ft 114111:1 v Alt" —C PN:givER 4:14 0 N' dix1011071e:41 fi t i Ce---2- 2 K4C -- I - bW 4(''s immail d441 ---dilli - ft 5 a Another Measure Asks Income Exemption Raise - 11 W10PP wmom4 dr '' I ol kM1P0 0 - t e'e-f- LI 01 W ' W'Wft ep ese 1 - many American :lives The victims included: first Lieutenant Charles W Campbell of Salt Lake City Eric Knicht English - born no‘elist who wrote "This Above 0c9p 00 -1 c lio ---- -——- Cr7:Nz (DUTCH i GUIANA t1 e I ‘ t 1" '110 - C ------ -- 0 15- By Associated Press four-motor- - Salt Lake City Utah Friday Morning January 22 1913 Ties - Til tvy 7' - At :411 116 No 100 Vol -- (7 ' 4 - - lo- -0 Russia---(Offici- al) By United Press Fr id a y Jan 22— Soviet troops sweeping 30 miles or more across the north Caucasus steppes Thursday captured Toroshilovsk great industrial and agricultural center 185 miles southeast of Rostov the soviet high command announced Friday At the same time an official statement said the red army had killed more than 500000 German troops and captured more than 200000 in the first two months of Its winter campaign This indicated a total nazi casualty figure well over 1000000 when the wounded are taken into account The capture of Voroshilovsk city of 85000 called the gateway to the Kuban granary and the Maikop oil fields was the most important triumph of the red army in the Caucasus since it stemmed the German invasion tide at the edge of the Grozny oil area far to the MOSCOW southeast Nazis Fight Fiercely A special communique said the resistance of the German gairrison at Voroshilovsk was crushed in stubborn fighting reflecting a nazi determination to fight to the death the soviet onrush against '141te announcement that Voroshilovsk had been liberated came as other soviet armies swung through the Don and Donets valleys to the north in converging drives on Rostov and Kharkov their spearheads cutting swaths in the German defense some 60 miles! from the two richest prizes in south Russia The soviet Thursday midnight communique disclosed that the red was rapidly broadening its advance on both the Donets and Caucasian fronts Four Centers Captured The capture of four district centers in the north Caucasus was reported including'Takhta 60 miles north of Voroshilovsk and Kugulta 29 miles northeast of Voroshilovsk while the railroad station at Golofeyevka 67 miles southwest of Voronezh and 97 miles northeast of Kharkov fell to the Russians in the Donets valley The special communique coin- on Plaza (Continued Two) (Column Elva) Allied Rombers Sweep France - LONDON Jan 21 (ID—Swarms of R A F fighters and bombers including two squadrons of the United States army air forces swept northern France and the lowlands Thursday vvithout loss in raids on Caen Cherbourg Flushing and an airdrome near Le Harve Three German planes were destroyed Several German planes crossed the southeast coast of England Thursday night and were met by heavy ground fire There were no immediate reports of bombings The U S planes were part of an escort for Ventura medium era and Bostons which bombed the German air fields at Caen and the Tricqueville airport near Le Harve the air ministry said Other Bostons battered the docks af Cherbourg and at Flush-ruptuing in Holland I bomb-marin- es re French Ships Aid Allies NEW YORK Jan 21 (INS)— h of the French merchant marine representing 50 ships some of which are of heavy tonnage now are serving the cause of the united nations the Dakar radio said Thursday in a broadcast recorded by C B S One-fourt- -- advices from the allied base Bone did not cite allied from Cairo said however of MarRommel's riddled Afwas fleeing from Tripoli by land under hail of allied bombs land bullets and U S Undersecretary of War Robert P Patterson said in Washington that the fall of the city seemkt a matter of hours'v Use Small Vessels Part of the axis army is trying to escape in small vessels towing longs strings e)f heavily laden bar-eunder constant attack by allied planes and light British warships the Madrid reports said The Tripoli harbor was described as partially blocked by sunken vessels while scores of fires raged along the waterfront Axis demolition squads had caused heavy damage to roads and bridges on both sides of Tripoli t f t 100-mi- '" t t f hampering the British as they approached the city from the east and south with tanks and artillery the Madrid advices said- - Patterson emphasized that although Rommel probably would not be able to make another stand east of Tunisia he had withdrawn in fair order with minimum losses C Defenses of Sort The earlier Cairo reports said the enemy rear guard had thrown up defenses of a sort along an arc around Tripoli but was being attacked relentlessly by two Eighth army CIOUM113 one driving up from Tarhuna to the south and the other edging westward along the coast from Horns The Madrid dispatches however reported that the rear guard itself was now well west of Tripoli in full flight toward Tunisia and that the city's fall was imminent (C B S Correspondent Winston Burdett broadcast from Cairo to America at 6:50 p rn' (E W T) that the long flight westward is nearly over and in a few hours from now the victorious Eigrath army will be at the gate S of Tripoli" '' British Complete Hard Task The exact position of the lead-arm- y in British column the one south of Tripoli was not announced but it was reported to have completed Its most difficult Job the traversal of the desert ridges just above Tarhuna 40 miles from Tripoli and was now on the open plain Rommel's main body meanwhile was streaming westward from road to Tripoli along the Tunisia which was becoming a flaming focal point of attacks by allied bombers fighters and fight from three directions— French Africa the middle east arid Malta The ?tome radio broadcast art official Italian admission that the axis Tripo Martian army was "fall- as anticipated" inA back Cairo communique reporting the capture of Horns and Tarhuna Wednesday said that British forces kept in close contact with the enemy throughout the day Attack Tripoli Harbor Meanwhile United States (Liberator) bombers made two vicious attacks on the Tripoli harbor where Rommel was reported in unofficial dispatches Wednesday to be tryinr to evacuate part of his troops by sea Planes from the middle east and French commands combined their efforts to sink three more ships in the Mediterranean runntrig' the enemy's losses to at least 21 vessels sunk and nearly that many more damaged in this month's operations alone Repeated night raids on the big Caste! Benito airfield 10 miles south of Tripoli climaxed by a heavy attack Tuesday night apparently had bombed it out of commission as very little axis air interference was reported in Wednesday's action While the Eighth army swept on Tripoli the allies were on the defensive temporarily on the second African front in Tunisia where German shock troops jabbed some 12 miles into French positions- -southwest of Pont Du northpoint of the ern and central sectors - F r t le 7 - : !: rz 4 11-- 2t t - i T '' i l - -J-- - Fahs---juncti- on so-call- ed A 44 - 1 14N ' ':' t -" ‘ t i : |