Show - - MIMMIIM4441112M04"4104WRiPARIWIMIA -- — — - — '- - a J - - tI '" ' t'f 1 - Zhe 45a It oI(t rtribunt January 29 1943 Drastic Decree Institutes Reds Report Tralyifig Needs Tunisia Holds Nazi Mutiny Place Key 'Release Forced Labor in Reich Naiis Arrest At Stalingra4 Delay Men Over 38 In Global War of All German Men Bet4eenI6 and 65 Russ Shock Forces 1000 Men Question of Allied Women Front 17 to 45 Must Work Generalissitni) May Capture Rail Slackers Confronted by Death Penalty In Budapest Be Receiving Study Junction Near Kursk Jan drastic instituting It thiaguis Genera Alexandor imperi-- t al commander in chief in Egypt and now conquered Italian north Africa head up the only land fronts where allied troops other 28 (4'P)--- -A comLONDON new decree (Continued from Page One) all German men from 16 to 65 and all t pulsory labor service for the right wing of Colonel General women from 1Tto 45 was announced by the German radio Thurs Golikov's army of the VorPhilip with strong hints that the death penalty will be applied to onezh front day yesterday crushed Gerslackers man at Kastornaya resistance The announcement was rnade school foreigner s clergymen a determined one assau1t' women child after below with school after days of an intense propaN-Ewomen at two with least age Caucasus soviet troops In in the the German press children under 14 ganda barrage W YORK Jan 2g and expectant battering their way northwest organizations" and radio warning that Adolf than 1000 Hungarian army leem reich is at a crisis in the war mothers railroad along the Rostov-Bak- u officers have been arrest ed in because of continued reverses on reached a pant only eight miles below Kropotkin with the capture front and that the sitBudapest because they "openly de- - the eastern of most the district center and railroad calls uation for the bitter eared Hungary had nothing sacrifices of Gulkevichi the midnight station to gain from th e war- it was re- In their discussions of the grow-porte- d communique said Thursday by the Algiers ing seriousness of the situation Kropotkinu is at the junction of Rostov-Bakthe railroad and the radio in a broadcast recorded by Berlin radio commentators have I east-weline running from the been hewith I dwelling 'United states government Mori- increasing Black sea base of Novorossisk to on the date of January 30 ' ters The broadcast gave reports quency the tenth of Hitler's Voroshilovgrad anniversary from Ankara aa its source The midnight communique also (Continued from Page One) coming to power and there were conin LONDON Jan 28 um—Adolf reported the capture of twou railunrest of Poland that he 'numerous Peports suggestions American Fifth army in Tunisia use the occasion Saturday Hitler faced by disaster in Russia road stations on the Rostov-Baktrued The Moscow radio ounted might and the French army railroad' to has discuss full of abandoned to the direct implications attempts Stockholm sources as saying that i war To the northeast two more measure the own his the and intuition The including by drastic welding of these armies into three-day period in War- del‘th penalty during a has turned back the direction of towns fell in the enveloping drive one force NV38 rapidly bemilitary skaw "several thousand inhabi- Arinotinctment to his generals on Tikhoretsk The capture of affairs military a Lacking from the French frontier Kalnibolitakayap 15 miles to the comingofn military necessity as the tanta regardless of sex or age were reports General Sir Harold Alexi was no official northeast and army there said Thursday Although seized and set off in an unknown announcement 28 miles to the east on the railroad' ander and the Fighting French in a of reThe German staff forthcoming general direction" the German fuehrer moved from control of military af- to Stalingrad was announced In the far east meanwhile the Hitler speech Tripolitania rapidly neared a juncbooty were taken tion' with General Eisenhower's Japanese-controlle- d Mantia radio hardly ever has missed this op- fairs after the German retreat at Prisoners and 48 miles west of from Moscow last winter once Kastornaya ' said that occupation authorities in portunity the Voronezh where One German said broadcast the is railway to forces 'in Tunisia all the decisions again making the Philippines had been forced to north-sout- h 1Kursk crosses line For the United States General the "is expectIt was said At present all the anniversary generally take action against certain and George C Marshall army chief between the Moscow-Rosto- v ed in Berlin to be marked by the energies of Germany's fireprofessional of for the v ipinos roads the of staff Admiral Ernest J King enta tion of some kind of- soldiers are concentrated on sav- the Moscow-Kharkoarms ammunitionstealing and explosives pres °' tatements said bulletin special commander of the U S fleet guarby from prominent the disastrous ing something The soviet Tass agency reportThe fallen town is 22 miles north Lieutenant General H H Arnold Russian campaign ed that German army units sta- ters" of Gorshechnaya the capture of chief of the army air forces and Hints of the death penalty were 'Coned in Bayonne and Dijon in Among the decisions already which was announced a day earlier other high officers took Dart in in a radio contained the was taken spokesman's by France mutinied when ordered to general staff it to Whether Golikov's troops pushed the conference before the labor draft said was a plan for retreat a the eastern front last December forecast the announced in which he cited Britain was equally'well repredefense line in Russia up the railroad toor struck along It wa s said that "four German Ixas was a not east Voronezh line the German wat seventeenth century sented by her chief strategists be on would based that Kursk 18 men were shot in decree officers and providing such penalty for thence run southward through specified Field Marshal Sir John Dill head Bayonne" Meanwhile reports from Stalin- of the British joint staff mission desertion from military duty Then Kharkov and have its southern end the spokesman Joachim Schiefer anchored on Sevastopol in Crimea grad said mutinous German troops in Washington Admiral Sir Dud't decker ofthe propaganda ministry facing death in the fast constrict- ley Pound first sea lord GenThe reports said some added pointedly: ing soviet nooses there were sur- eral Alexander Vice Admiral men in Germany felt thatmilitary Hitler "These are ordinances of total had waited too long to abandon rendering in wholesale lots Lord Louis Mountbatten chief of A war They will rule the coming intuition as a means of nazi general three colonels the commandos and others waging four lieutenant new mobilization of- all remaining war and there was colonels other high to reported n 13L'ENOS AIRES Jan 28 (INS) energy at home" be considerable pessimism about officers and thousands of hunger-riddeLONDON Jan 28 Cla—Ameri- troops gave up the hopeless Dietrich Niebuhr Ger- Decree Quoted the ability of the general staff to can redefiance of orders to troops were reported to have rnan naval tattache accused of fight toin the extricate the German army from sist Marshal Erwin Romrenarrowed The of end decree the the Russians a peramble nail in is Argen- I spy ring the difficulties into which Hitler baring ca by Labor Commissioner corridor to 33 miles niers ssue escape will Frileave the country ported tJla it l said that had plunged da aboard the Spanish ship Monte --Fritz Sauckl merely — Only a few thousand Germans and a combined Giraud and De all German men and women must remained of the army numbering Gaulle French column threatened A:bert!a It was d:sclosed ThursI was their 220000 when it was trapped They the southern end of his protective at place His exclusively w:thdrawal Dairies Threaten Strike day requested the disposalenergies of the fighting and were squeezed in two strangling Mareth line Thursday as indicaby the Argentine government TUCUMCARI N M Jan 28 circles of soviet steel and their tions grow that the allies were working peoples community in this — Tucumeari milk dealers ranks were fast shrinking ur" for battle preserbeginning a major offensive in Wbc 5alt gake Zribunt vation" an increase of a Tunisia Red Star soviet the Thursday rejected jourarmy Issued cory morn:mg !entered at the All persons affected must reg- cent a quart on milk and an- nal said the bulk of the doomed Among these indications was a "nat oftee at Salt eny asIL saeund emu !natter under act of Marcrs ister at the nearest labor bureau nounced their Intention to go Germans had been mopped Up 1679 military conferUtatt Irtabo ea The only exceptions it was said ahead with plans to shut down on Russian explosives are turning into ence among the highest military iltibsPr!ptAnn rates: montn and evIntiss were persona already working 48 February 1 unless the price ceiling blazing infernos the buildings still officials of Britain and the United 1'azt 5: Wsnnaru daily 1112 sicivansewhns ton V II Cars stsd itAndas month 111:3 hours a week boys and girls in were upped another two cents held by the remnants it added States which was concluded at Lieutenant General Dwight D Eisenhower's headquarters in north Africa - ' r : at ' ilungarian Army Officers held Algiers Reports Hit-:Mo- Fuehrer Junks Intuition For Generals t I I i : i I 1 Nazi Attache 1 1 world-encirclin- )r I IA - " - I :lif i ! 0 ' s r-- - N rfr11 I' - 1 a- i I 14 L 4 -- r 'I' ref e? 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LA -) -- ' Li 7 L311 LA "'' :- - 4 ' t a- ses fa: - 1 i a :) - - - ' ' ' 4 a a : a a - F ri r : i I I t'' '' - 4 a - i Tba VIKING - - ' a a- a - - : The IAMBI:RN I 7 1 to be ofI an 19 0 "ILIA tillvi-1101- L11 - ra- 12 II 0 1 ti I 4I: I 7 L 1 matter id 7 i 6I1("7 19q t -- 0 ut sere-s- o Florsliel A -- ) 164 SOUTH MAIN z y -- (4) —:1 '' :i i 7 Jial ' SALT ' (I"- gar erleicialonlItrtutoh NILlialL‘417f1 Size r 4 S: - 4147'' t -- - ' i I a A:? te C I (444 ' L-- :: -- - 2 i LK ----- ----------- r -- - tI il - L 1 in it emir 1 i I ' - A 72MV5‘-'7- re ItDdoiLL:'''' i 1 - Leits -H c - : ault4 I i 1I ' dr— i g' "- ::: : I' - ' -- - $350 Values - - i :': I- - :' - i $3 $945 45 ' :t - t I - -& - ' ' II 1 This season's styles shapes and colors- NOT out 6 fotyt hats held over from previous winters - - I -- ti - - 1 -- ) 5 t I Our policy is to sell each season's merchandise before that season doses It's an unusual procedure in times like these when new shipments of all wearing apparel including hats are so hard to get but we'll take our chances - ''' I - ::''! k - : : --k :7: - 1 1 I ::: 1 - t - ir a t i - '' '' : : - : - - ' ::'- ' " --- i 1 tr) 1L trall2 1 ' :' - I- :s:7 i South Main Street 208-21- 0 i! - - :::-- t ith -- : - f— 7 - - t- - :'- f - I 11 ''::: 7 : '77-- ' 1 I ' - '' - i o 1 : : I p ' 1 - l': a - - y ii - - - a 1 i t '- i - i ! 1 N : - ) I aata 4 : jlaull 11I ::: f ' i I irgr - Or I ) - r''' i r '' ' —T-:"- r--- -- - trg : - 1 $500 Values ' 4 a - 1 r - ' v - Main n i1 Ail 1r !' llioNK' are'ALLL- - u41 7 k t 01 4 y k' 'y y LAKE So 263 11 - 1 mi- mi in f - 4evteeentle tsentrclable gotirotheir 0 — - --- - airovtr) el cl - - OWN 41 JEWELRY 77 1 A --- 1 minim ten Remedr) elnicals phenolehdoreriVa I table chlterenet3 are different I ita'etfd conabinatJon sege- Of JO SO coated over action isOr can13'eara agoforrnu- - war effort Our part in-tcountry's all-oAmerica on a healthy is to put footing—in tough rugged"stormy leather" are built to take the loinueghthesist gshooi ne gs toh ant front line or production Winter America can't afford to get cold feet Moo 50 and $11 Refit $ II ''::- - t wau re s Tablets Liveminerals IYR T'agr act he 1 P i LI A4rit ern 1 hard-workin- g I- - t "" t III Ne liTCCIZIC ' ' ' - - - ittp (ill col- - Eisenhower and his British s: Inotolksre sensillo 0-- ic- : 4 -- ' 11 7:itA11:41411&01?)gli-1)-i lii 1 1 i allied generalissimo for the Eurotheater as a whole If that pean iis in the works the conference at Eisenhower's headquarters must have had something to do with the e saCyle:rs II 14 44aeleA4 11 Clini')Csrlt that of r7"ntral7 ''''' E 1 1 if tpohei net"aei leooffikeediellefloull the southern sector strong American and French forces vvere massing for a companion offensive r - a '''''' - T $ t British-America- 1 -' TO an erhityoubldotn ut ' 4 t I 14 1 I German dare to "come out and fight" and captured 80 prisoners The axis apparently anticipatattack put out reing the all-oports through the Paris and Vichy n radios saying that forces concentrated In the regions of l Medjez El Bab and BouArada already had gbegun an offensive against the axis forward positions" in Tunisia and that in i I l'41 c a a I - ? '': ' - I Number Captured The radio broadeaat said the enemy troops retreated to the north and a number of them were captured Maknassy vvas the 101110 of an American raid early this week when the Americans answered a r- ' - - ) ' : ' i4 '' 4r: - e Ipt ' ' 1- - 4 - ' - ' Fight-i- ' - es 1 The American thrust obviously aimed at either Sfax or Gabes or the coast between put these troops In a position to sever the connection between Rommel to the south and the axis forces of General Jurgen von Arnim around Tunis and I3izerte to the north -- e- :i 1' Gen- French a -- - I s 1n: a fi ' P1' ' (093-CyteCZ- 48-ho- of General Henri Giraud eral Charles de Gaulle of the r - -- garrison nhoaudneevacuated Gadames in Tripolitania some 195 miles south of the end of fortified Mareth line and that le fort been occupied by the combined forces 1 7 1 I -: '''4' f : 1 ‘ DAYIN 1 — - - :'1--' ' I "'i ' "' - r7:7-7- V ' 4" a tf 't ' - ' -) ' f a e'r 7' a41 ' ‘ A - - - ea - t :-' t: :' : ' ' Nki( : 11) ' :0 - MP 7iN trans-Mediterrane- the broadcast Simultaneously said British troops to the north were showing marked activity in the Medjez El Bab and Bou Arada regions facing Tunis and Bizerte and a French communique an- ' JAsly ' S t1 '::'-- - - y southeast jli ' 4P ) ei i ? 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I a - i i ' i - rs: 4 114iL PIT ail' ite4211 :Italia - L-i-- - I - - - r 4 11 - hda US IT-bo- at - - I - '111--r ""- 46 y- L6 ss - - I 1 g- full-dre- Ay' FAP I A :— '' :: 1 tain I ' : --- - ' 4 :' By Kirke L Simpson ' Ni At AO d" " '7:-I " 's ' ' ': '' '" ' Associated Press Feature Writer ' Whatever the actual purpose of '' ' ' : 0 : ) the follow-u- p conference of British ''''' 1 ''' and American military leaders ' fr's ir S with Generals Eisenhower and AlT'''' "''''''' :' '' ' -21:reet exander in the wake of Casablanca ' ': - 6 'r I1' developments it can hardly con'' t " tribute to axis peace of mind 0'' ' 4:41 I The coming crucial battle of f 1 t ' t ' Tunisia must be the central pivot of Casablanca war policy making Elimination (S4f the last axis toe'' N 44 hold in Africa is the quickest road Pik' t alms IP ' LIT to achieve any of the strategic ob"1 1' v Z' jectives revealed or intimated in Zconnection with the Casablancal seasion Whether it is to help Rusale to a victory that will deatroy nazi power again to take the offensive in the east to curb 1 r 6M 1114 11 kik 1 kat menace to allied sea 731 grave communications or to prepare an a0001C--- 7""":" African springboard for allied in- '4"1410 Tunisia N:119i On of the continent ) is the obvious hub of the global war wheel at this moment for the brightening allied cause Once the final siege lines in TuTRIBUTE LOVE nisia are set a junction of the east and west jaws of the great allied nutcracker around the siege perA ring so lovely that its sparkling beauty will grow imeter will be established At that moment if not before military exdearer with the years fine 14K gold mounting pediency would dictate the estab3 with set diamonds of fiery brillianca and aqui-sitlishment of a single allied over-a- ll command in Africa Its job would cut be to oversee the siege operations and also to plan for subsequent action to consolidate the whole north African coast for later Anderson's Pay ril offensive operations Wkly Special It is possible that the sessions at Eisenhower headquarters were to ImPlement promptly decisions CREDIT AT NO EXTRA COST taken at Casablanca both as to ultimate unification of all allied forces in Africa under a supreme A I I t' N 4command and as—to supply line "114e ° '!priorities to be put into effect once iro a junction is made Once the east ea and west allied jaws do meet a resia KrVotSN4‘0sad"tils degeseseese--- --' shuffling of the logistics of the merged campaigns to get greater i car- lb of a''::eaa I yults I ' ' trio' I Arentina Todav I t : - - - le I - i ' s I d-- Interpretative (Opinion) ' ' 750-mi- pt - t t N :: r ' I 0 ' ) - A 4111 11) 1 : 4 ''' Novo-Pokrovsk- 1 - ''- - - I ANDERSON'S JEVIELRY 'WelOWSf711110 - Or Allied Chiefs Prepare to Unify Forces st 1 4 re tl-la- t i smo-- o- 1 4711r170!10 : ' -- I Africa ia to be bet up both Eiaenhower and Alexander would hav to be ronaulted - - WASHINGTON Jam 28 —The discharge of men 38 or older from the army will be retarded until peplaternents have htten traine the war department annouriced Thursday estimated 'there were 300000 over 38 in the army Officials denied that releases of men over 38 had been suspended even temporarily but the announcement explained that they "must be so regulated as to prevent the disruption of trained than tho Pukfriars are In eontart with the foe aa yet If a new over! all comrnand in Europe or only in t2 i i r: - - t I ' - '' - ::: '''---- - - ii i : - f ' '' |