Show 9 4— - - - i 2 1 ZTlie Saturday 1torning 4 1 By Assoclated Point Step-Of- f I'Tit 1 $ 1 - st Tunis-Bizert- Bz-itis- h British-America- co-oo- I el 1 lend-leas- 3 f 1 0 1 I ter 1 In N 1 event recent official recapitulations of any Wasgtondeliveries to Russia such as tanks and planes during 1942 are impressive There have been losses at sea but indications are that a substantial part of shipments reached their destinations lend-leas- N - ) e — 4 - Medical Authority Dies ' 1 i r 44 - I4 0 I : i Z' - ) 1 1 (---- i 400 - - i rotor t lc - 14 it04 3 4 --- -r 74 ''''- r II I - P e! NiNlitir 1 3 i I 7eV k 4 (st'' 1 v ' 1 THE WiriES is oil 1 Telephone service like tires must go a - t4 long way n'oviedays k :: Avoid unnecessary calls to war busy cities - 'pp i r'f 13 ' 1 1 4- - -- 0- 7 Tit I - ir 1 - l1 tA''' - :71CIAN STATES TEL - - 1 ItL tt le t' 4t' le 1r It ill-cl- ad :i British Forces Russians Spur Battle Inside Rostov Push Tripoli's Gates As Salsk Falls (Continued from Page One) miles below Pont Du Fah and northwest of Kairouan An enemy attack on French positions "dominating t h e approaches to Kairouan 20 miles west of the town has failed completely" the communique added Allied warplanes pummeled both German columns in strong attacks yesterday and the British and American troops were rushed to the side of the French The Girmart force coming down east of the ridge was led by 50 tanks Nazis Use 150 Tanks r en ch headquarters reported the Germans had thrown 150 tanks many of them the latest Mark Four type into the battle area there and farther north near Bou Arada where other British forces are fighting Germans attacking westward from Pont Du Falls The British knocked out two nazi tanks making an assault Thursday night and destroyed six tanks that lumbered to the attack Thursday In the valley running northeast from Robaa the troops were engaged in furious fighting a headquarters spokesman said U S fighter and bomber squadrons Thursday carried out the most widespread and effective operations in recent days spokesmen reported machine gunning and bombing the German columns attacking ship011g) engaging nazi planes in the air and punishing large motor convoys on the coastal road alongwhich Field Marshal i l Rommel's Erwin battered Africa corps seeks to withdraw from I Trip-°Man- ia American planes destroyed 10 axis airships and "well over" 65 i I in their enemy motor vehicles sweeps losing only three aircraft themselves — LONDON Jan 22 (A)—French troops reinforced by the British First army have advanced several miles In central Tunisia a communique from French headquarters in north Africa said Friday night Text of Communique The French communique said: "The enemy's aggressive action has diminished during Friday In the Valley of Oued Kebir "Our by British elements made an advance of several miles "To the northwest of Kairouan the strong enemy attack reported in the previous communique was stopped and partly repulsed "American troops are - engagedin this action "The enemy attack on our positions dominating the approaches to Kairouan 20 miles west of the town ham completely failed "In the eastern Sahara than 200 prisoners were when Serdeles and El Barea were captured By these operations the encirclement of Chat has been accomnlished "During the past few days the one Focke-Wuon that front One of our planes Is missing" (Continued from Page One) ens of Caucasian vil1age3 and a number of larger towns Among them was Donskoye 28 miles north of Voroshilovsk and 22 miles west of Kugulta both of which were taken a day earlier 15 Another was miles southeast of Salsk Salk site of one of the main German air bases in the north Caucasus Is on the StalingradTikhoretsk railway 15 miles below the Manych river and 30 from Proletarskaya which fell to the Russians on Wednesday It was from Salsk that the Germans attempted to maintain an aerial ferry to aupply their army encircled and being chopped to pieces before Stalingrad Earlier soviet reports said the battered German forces in south Russia sacrificed 5000 men Friday Rovo-Yegowl- ik d futile counterattacks against the red army landslides as the noose of death tightened aroundthe thousands of troops in the Stalingrad pocket (The German high command for the first time admitting the desperate plight of the Stalingrad army reported that it was "closely in rear-guar- encircled" and the Russians exerting strong pressure from all sides had broken through from the west forcing a withdrawal of several kilometers (Conceding other grave reverses the Berlin communique said that in the Caucasus the Germans "detached themselves from the enemy according to plan in the course of mobile fighting" and that on the whole southern front the red army "started to break through") Soviet assault units hammering the tight nazi pocket at Stalingrad - now containing perhaps 50000 to 80000 of the original 220000 victims of encirclement smashed in west of the city to capture several strongly fortified positions the midday communique reported A flurry of German counterblows all along the south- ern front from Voronezh to the Caucasus was reported but officiall accounts said they availed the nazis and their satellites nothing more than the loss of more than 3000 men killed and more 50er-mi- le 1943 - I STOCKHOLM Sweden Jan 22 (JD—Travelers reaching Sweden from Germany said that many nazis from officials down to small fry ward heelers are beginning to remove their party badges from their lapel buttonholes because they are losing faith in victory and fear the consequences These sources added however that although this is one of the first signs of the nazis running for cover they still carefully carry the buttons with them and wear them at official functions to keep up appearances This reported symptom of deteriorating morale reverses a the Voronezh front soviet troops tightened the rings around enemy garrisons which were repulsed in attempts to break out of their death traps They also seized a number of towns and villages while a single soviet unit killed more than 1500 axis troops trend which started early in 1938 with Hitler's bloodlesa conThen "'WAquest of Austria Stikas popped out over night on lapels Many persons who were members of the party for years - r I j - WITH THE BRITISH EIGHTH ARMY AT MISURATA Jan 20 (Delayed)—The most disappointed man in this village today was its Italian prefect He turned out in all his ribbons and medals expecting toturn the place over to at least a colonel Instead his first visitors were a band of dusty war correspondents We barged into Misurata with few thoughts other than how we were going to have our eggs cooked when suddenly we saw half a dozen of the enemy in olive drab just ahead all armedtoto the teeth a stop The Our driver reached for his tommy gun We thought we were In for it But it turned out the enemy were Italikn police who had been expecting us They gave the three correspondents snappy salutes presenting arms Then they directed us to the prefect—Brigadier General Amedeo Decaro Arriving at the governmental palace we were received with honors by the prefect's personal bodyguard The short fat decorated n on prefect gave us the the situation After the first shock of finding we were mere journalists he expressed delight that we had ar- He said the Arabs were getting ugly and that some citizens feared for their lives The prefect had received orders from Rome to remain with his entire administrative staff to protect the remaining civilians from the Arabs He put the entire police force at our disposal I explained that the army was too bus-- chasing the Germans to Tripoli 'to indulge in social calls but the prefect flustered hemmed and hawed saying he had been expecting at least a colonel What happened was that our advance was so swift there had been no time to evacuate the remaining 300 Italian civilians from Misurata: About 100 Italian police had been left behind to guard them from the Arabs who appeared to hate the Italians 4 British Rescue Yank From Italian Captors - - Jan 22 (JP—Second Lieutenant Bernard S Gillespie CAIRO 23 of Gila Bend Ariz cabled his father today: "Disregard any notification of my capture by the Italians The British captured me back and am safe well and happy" Gillespie was aboard a submarine with seven other Americans and Britons when it was sunk by British bombers from Malta The rescued him Gillestish maie copilot of a 6 rauder bomber shot down while at- tacking an enemy landing field near Gabes December 31 described his adventures prior to the fateful B-2- Get Under Way - 1 Papua Fight LI LI - ' 117 my dummies with live ammunition Terrific explosions set off by cle'Verly constructed booby i— Utah Idaho Ns- Subscription rates: and month Wymninoito daily Sundayetaavvhers Advance $12: year $105: 4 -- fl' 3 f :) Ví la 4t't4 t 4 ' tg'-- q I I Report Cites Nazi Spying MONTEVIDEO Uruguay San memorandum charging a vast spy ring is operating in Argentina directed and financed by the German embassy at Buenos Aires and acting on instructions fromthe nazi high command was published Friday by the committee for political defense The report—submitted by the United States—said the ring operations affected 11 American republics that its top men acted under diplomatic immunity and that it sent t6 Berlin information on ship movements U S troop transfers airplane routes from Natal in Brazil to north Africa and even facts on U S plane production The committee voted 5 to 1 for publication with Argentina voting in the negative and Chile abstaining thus returning the favor to Argentina which had abstained from the vote two months ago to publish a similar memorandum on spy activities in Chile 22 (21')—A inter-Americ- an (Continued from rage One) scale cooperative blows at Japan to follow At that time Churchill declared that "it may well be that the war In Europe will end before the war in Asia If events should take mulch a course we should of course bring all our forces to aid the United States and our kith and kin in Australia and New Zealand in the struggle against the aggres- - Feeding the belief here that some comprehensive steps are being taken is anair of expectancy and optimism in high quarters The Washington visits of Ambassador John G Winant and Admiral Harold R Stark commander of U S naval forces in European waters may be related to such reported plans The north African campaign and the new blows by Russia grew out of conferences last year and similar platining and coordination are expected to come from the present negotiations One of the questiofts as to coordination concerns who is to command allied forces in any attack on Europe from Britain or Africa or both Lieutenant General Dwight D Eisenhower's appointment to command in north Africa followed after a high British authority last summer said he was willing to see such a post go to an American general and allied leaders now probably are discussing whether Eisenhower's responsibility should be increased or not after the expected juncture with the British forces of General Sir Harold Alexander commander in chief in the middle east - WASHINGTON Jan 22 ill)--committee of thewar labor will vi:gi't'IC4ns‘a"evvii Denver San Francisco next week to assist and advise in the setting up of regional boards in those cities A 1in i 1 L?P 1 s I 10 c 3 itAl P i 44-N - s 14- 0 r -- jr A4 tt 1 wit 1't r N ri' A4 f - 4 otety izi vI i 4 1v:144-Vt- - 'r'- - ' i''001 'W 4t - r t' 4ty t t 4 ' - -:- '4' 1 - Z : 1 ': - - ''''- - I 1' 1 z0 - 1 !-- - ' '' i --- -r--- ''' mC l' -' I - — - I ' 1 A'' t I 'r I! 1 y- 4-‘ : t qi - V ' 'r i 4 't:!? t ts4:00 s t! 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W L B Visit Slated - ' Wr A " ''t ii' j "vt? '131 ' 7t i la? i :: t '' 4 t 1t°' jet- 11 FA tg A tit3 ' to 1 - '''- : ‘(11 07 - I- : L cto $: 2-- t't7- - 1 - - 1114 ' - 4'4- a -- i ' t1- e ts ' 0' :t' '''-- fi i i- 1 P le 1 ? ?'- - e J: Ji14t-q-‘ 4 0 eRtI s t tN42 ot 's'll' -: - Fosicr-1131w- 1 I I yacht I '' li ' ''c - 4-0-2-- A T : : 1 for the 711: 4:1 ' t and Other Service Men Wherever They Are! We Have AU Kinds Them T hem Them Them naT4' V Allied 'Big 4' Maps High War Council -- - BOYS ACROSS THE SEAS post office at Salt Lake City as second clasg matter under act of March 8 1879 I- )4 Now Ready :Salt gakt Zeibunt Issued every moraing Entered at ths tt''')‘ t- -- 'VALENTINES liveries Last month they delivered only 35000 tons against the contractual 65000 tons Some Danisn industries already have been forced to close and others are preparing to do so Copyright by New York Times ' x - t i - 'Z'Fakodilig b - — - hand-to-han- "7 'Lietroe 1--1 f: - - Direct hits on a 4000-to- n cargo kroner vessel Danish ship split and sank the8000-toExports Drop n within four minutes An a was Farm at left burning transport products figure in Danish result of two direct hits and later exports for 1942 only to the extent of 44 per cent whereas in 1940 the was seen to explode vessel with a lighter figure was 80 and in 1941 67 per "A 4000-to- n moored alongside was hit and cent This is taken as evidence that sank within 12 minutes while an- the Germans are rapidly despoiling vessel received the Danish farm and dairy indusother 8000-to- n exthree direct hits and was left tries Before the war Danish amountod of these products ports a of series with explosions burning 800- Two searchlights were extin- to between 700000000 and to Great 000000 kroner annually guished by strafing All our planes Britain the principal customer returned safely" In an effort to create unemployThe allied ground victory add- ment in Denmark with the object ing up to one of the greatest for releasing Danish workers Gerachieved against Japan in the of war industry the soutH Pacific was recorded in its German mans have halved their coal de- - 7-- 1 - so-call- ed ar17 I i i Three hundred fifty physicians have signed a petition protesting the imprisonment of Professor Chievitz a leading Danish surgeon whom the nazis accuse of being a communist Major General Hermann von Hanneken commander of the German forces in Denmark has taken over the little Amalienborg palace on Oesterbro street as well as the Hotel Angleterre for his services Herr Best has installed himself in a villa in suburban Skovehoved after disdaining Rosenborg castle because of its lack of modern plumbing When the Danes made a trial balance at the beginning of this year they found the Germans owed them 1300000000 kroner for merchandise delivered mainly food and that the total cost of the occupation had risen to 2400000000 final action in these words: "Sananandatt Al! organized enemy resistance has been overcome i up iis i n progress Seven Mopping hundred twenty-fiv- e enemy deild have been found in addition to those previously reported with many more yet to be counted (Friday's communique had reported the slaying of 150 Japs)) An inconsiderable quantity of enemy material and equipment has been captured including field guns trucks and ammunition" I - Physicians Protest (Continued from Page One) which their drive across the mountains began last July American and Australian troops carried on this brilliant offensive while allied planes blasted attempts of the Japs to send reinisland forcements from near-b- y bases Four Jap ships went down at Rabaul whose harbor bottom already htld the hulks of many other vessels sunk in repeated raids by 14facArthur's bombers "In a predawn attack our bombers struck heavily at shipping in the harbor" the communique said of the new raid "In an extremely low level strike four ships of an aggregate tonnage of 24000 were destroyed Tenn Jan 22 UP)—The not so gentle art of murder and mayhem -as preached and practiced in the Second army ranger school here would make any American glad that the students are on our side "A gentleman in battle is a traps shower the men with dirt dead rnan" explained Lieutenant or sear them by their nearness The men literally bridge diaWilliam E Vazzana of Mononga- constructed barb wire bolically hela Pa who teaches his charges entanglements with their bodies how to disarm an enemy holding The first two rangers advanca bayoneted rifle smash his in- - ing in the problem throw themselves into the air- and squarely step break his elbow and cut his onto the sharp smashing' throat or crush his skull with his the entanglementbarbs to the own rifle all in one swift con- - The rest of the squad runground across their prone bodies tinuoUs motion Across a muddy field and be"You've got to learn to kill a man with your bare hands" said neath low barb wire strands the young officer whose pleasant other students inch their way on smile belied the intentness with their bellies hugging the ground which he advocated 'crippling because 38 inches overhead live machine gun bullets are flying blows beneath the belt Lieutenant Vazzana's course in Fire From Hip d combat is only one of the 15 the 600 picked men to Other courses require the men attain near marksmanship have studied for the past two while firing their weeks most of them under simu- perfection lated battle conditions which ap- weapons from the hip to discover and render harmless booby proach the real thing traps to scale cliffs with short Blasts Churn Water lengths of rope to do anything For instance aa the rangers which will "kill the enemy first" "It's past the theory stage skitter across a three-stran- d rope We're all learning stuff that'll help on to which strand bridge—one walk the others to hold—heavy us plenty on the battlefield" Sergeant John H charges of dynamite churn ana commented White of Springfield ni one of geyser the water less than two the feet below the sagging rope Other school35 Negroes attending the charges rock the stream banks "This is great stuff — Tye shake the trees to which the learned auis anchored Near plenty" said Corporal Gus bridge by tomatic rifles and machine guns Kalama of Madras Ore an Inchatter just to lend realism to dian We can teach our buddies the scene Over at the rangers' recon- plenty when we get back to our asserted Staff Sergeant structed nazi village the students outfits" Cutrera of New Orleans dodge from door to door while Leon And they can too brother their buddies covering their advance pepper the shacks and ene- they can CAMP FORREST on pre-electi- Allies Score Victory in I '7- Exclusive New York Times-Sa- lt Lake Tribune STOCKHOLM Sweden Jan 22 —Werner Best the reich's representative in Denmark has informed the Danish government that the reich cannot possibly tolerate elebtions on a democratic pattern in an occupied country according to reliable reports received here Elections for the folketing (the Danish lower house) were scheduled for early spring The campaign already has started Danish patriots are being arrested and incarcerated in the German-operate- d prison in Copenhagen where they are held without specific charges At one time there were 150 such cases but the Danes recently obtained the transfer of a number of them to the Danish law courts the defensive" ' low-dow- rived As Campaigns "We will have to lick the Japanese man by man and recover our territory island by island" Admiral Helfrich said in an Interview "I think the Japanese will fight to the end but the atmosphere in the Pacific has changed The Japanese are on car-screame- Kursk-Voronezh-Mosc- came into the open and began wearing them for the first time The party itself grew rapidly i n the years of cheap victory The explanation that the travl elers give iis that the Germans sporting the swastikas and party badges now are beginning to see the handwriting on the wall and at the same time sense the underlying hatred toward them among the many who have suffered at their hands This feeling has been aggravated am a result of military reverses the economic pinch of the fourth COLDS'HISERIES of war and the general r- - 1 year --r Masi t i repercussion of casualties which rve they cannot escape because sol3 ' diers daily hobble about on one ' I Li or dangle an armless sleeve La 11 ' wan IL: Vtii il:') t leg on the streeta For colds' coughs basal congestion muscle ac hog' get Penetro—Toodern medication in a With the swastikas gone they mutton Suet base 25-- double supply 35s hope the people will forget ' - By Henry T Gorrell United Press Staff Correspondent submarine trip: than 2000 captured "The Italians held us prisoner At the north end of the turbulent battle line Colonel General in an old fort at Tripoli It wasn't crowded There were three in Philip Golikov thrust northwest- too ward to Siniye Lipyagi 37 miles a room and two could stand up at southwest of Voronezh and 30 the same time Except for the lice miles southeast of Kastornoye it was not too uncomfortable "Only once did I hear an Italian junction of railroads The occupation of say he was sick and tired of the Kastornoye would block the rail war and that he would gladly You retreat of axis forces immediately come over to the allied side who could tell by the attitude of all west of Voronezh In the same area Golikov's men attempted to talk to you in prison advanced 13 miles west from Shat- though that they didn't care for alovka and occupied the rail sta- Mussolini's bargain "One man was surprised when I tion of Golofeyevka on the Moscow-Donets line bringing the red told bim I had volunteered for army within 87 miles of Kursk the service All the Italians said they Swastikas Disappear as Nazis Continue to Get Setbacks i A Colonel 9 at Least To Provide Crippling Moly:8 For Enemy Under War Conditions - taken awn ) SAN FRANCISCO Jan 22 (A'—"We have a long way to go over a hard road but we are on the path that leads to vicAdmiral C E L tory" Vice Helfrich commander in chief of the Royal Netherlands Indies navy declared Friday he warned that the Jap- tell::: would be difficult to de- - lie Expected - I " :ZZA 4r - e i defenders" wag acknowledged about ten days ago when the Germans after two days of exhorting the troops to fight said the Russians were attackingfrom all sides The communique broadcast by Berlin and recorded by the Associated Press Thursday said the Russians broke the west lf N ftea kz reverses in the Caucasus as well the communique said: "In the eastern Caucasus German troops detached themselves from the enemy according to plan in the course of mobile fighting" Russian accounts say the trapped Sixth German army of General Friedrich Paulus' army before Stalingrad originally consisted of 22 divisions of 220000 men who have been reduced to and than 50000 on scraps of food eral kilometers by a Russian h from the west and tacitly admitted a retreat in the Caucasus The plight of the "Stalingrad forces-reinforce- WAVERLEY Masa Jan 22 (2P) —Dr John Rathbone Oliver 71 a retired professor of medical nistory at Johns Hopkins university in Baltimore Md died Thursday Dr Oliver also was a psychiatrist a novelist and a ii'2 the Protestant Episcopalpriest church - destroyed break-throug- Kirke L Simpaon A P Feature Writer The impending fall of Tripoli to the'British portends an important eharge in the aerial aspects of the battle of Tunisia even if Rommers remnants ' escape to join nazi forces in northern Tunisia Axis airfields that have come in bombfor furious allied east-weing to hamper Rommers retreat lie to the south and west of Tripoli They are now highly important to the allies for their own use in the battle of Tunisia The quicker those fields within miles or leaa of Tunis and Bizerte can be taken repaired and put back in servicea-- as allied air hazes the sooner triple bomb flre at relatively short range can be opened on axis defenses of the Tunisian foreland The rainy season in northeastern Tripolitania where those air fields lie is virtually over now although at least another month of frequent downpours is to be expected in stern Algeria and northern Tunisia Weather conditions should not greatly hamper stepped-u- p allied short range air attack on e the targets and land sea communication lines from the southeast once Tripolitania has been cleared of the foe The fight for control of the Mediterranean waistline confined largely to air operations except for the Eighth army advance and nazi efforts to hold open'and widen Rommel's escape corridor must therefore enter anew phase soon Eisenhower's American and bombers Malta's planes and n row air forces up with the Eighth army to strike from the southeast seem' destined to pour havoc on nazi defenders of Bizerte and Tunis to pave the way for final action It seems obvious that apprehension is running high in Berlin of some new allied offensive stroke perhaps in Norway even before the battle of Tunisia is fought out or the final crisis reached in the tRussian winter offensive Sweden appears worried that the war is coming closer to her Finland is startled by Russian success in cracking the nazi siege of Leningrad rAny stroke tending to lessen the hazards of the Murmansk-Archange supply line to Russia must appeal to the allied high commands That is what underscores nazi warnings that Norway may be the next theater to flame into action An allied li grip' on any part of the coast of northern Norway sufficient to supply air and sea bases for defense of Arctic convoys to Russia certainly would reduce losses Whether it is re'"tarily feasible is another mat- : beforeStalingrad and "are superior storming with forces" They claimed large numbers of soviet tanks were Admitting i 1 I January 23 1wall Press In their gloomiest communique of the war the German high command reported Friday that nazi troops encircled near Sta Allies Realize 1 g g t 1 0 1 Trtibun-- Ban 91die1' Learn to Maim Germans Italians Salute Fall Admiral Dutch Tripoli's Nazis Admit Russ Tighten U S Scribes Democratic Will Kill h-- U S Combat S chool Aid Air Will Says Japs in Stalingrad Area In Misurata Danish Election Trap Finish to Fight Camp Forrest Courses Train Men War on Axis Nazis Arrest Patriots Prefect Disappointed far I 1 Salt 1Zikt - 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