Show - 140M ImPlININMORMUMWPIOW4NAM r - I 11:4 r i 1 1jc 2 - February 15 1943 A : New York 4r TIBET r--o ik' i d"Ad11)I INDIA 1411111k z) BURNIAr-- it 74 CALCUTTA:::A fikKYAB ots —R—A 4 7 l' i:-:- ' :: s :::im II - a a !- -!- 1 les -'- "e- 4) ''s br let - MAR ShA 'TRUK A tzAr S !NG Times-Sa- lt j'itS" GUAM v IS ::::: : : CAROLINE IS APOR Et' getrJ7Ngrr-e- CHUNGKING Feb 8 (Delayed) (UP) — The China information committee announced today that Generalissimo Chiang forthcoming book "The Destiny of China" is expected to sell more than 1000000 copies within a few days after its release on March 12 and thus will become "the best seller ever in China"' said that The announcement 500000 are being printed in Chinese and 500000 in English and that thousands of persons daily are placing orders at branch stores of the Cheng Chung Book company throughout Free China Within the next few days page "mats" of the book will be flown to New York and Calcutta as well as to 13 Chinese provincial capitals including capital of remote Sinkiang for simultaneous printing to release March 12 Three thousand advance copies autographed by the generalissimo were distributed to Chinese officials on China's New Year—Febru- ' th ' AO: - - :471 : : 500 6J AUSTRALIA sea-bor- - - C:ZIlt 1:i enemy planes with the loss of a and promised fighter theater of "great results" inthehis recent visit operations from of Lieutenant General Henry H Arnold chief of the U S air I air-defend- ed Jap China Getting Toll at 6066 More Aid Now In Guadalcanal Say Officials Navy Sets Prelate Joins In Madrid Mass IL THRFF-TIGHTH- ' One allied plane was missing (Bissel's summary said Tenth air force planes scored hits on three 6000-to- n ships on one of lend-leas- - 7 -- - - - t0 e vk T1 :till iI ) 1 I 1 :::' Ar — ' i1 IliF11111 I I I I 1111111111 2 r- -- — 464 ' t i 1:7-V- 1 1 1 - — II 1 I 1 pi tilII Hain Garments C- -7r Salt Cake Zfribune - Entered at the issued every morning Lake City as second post of fire at Sait act R 1879 March of under matter etas' NeUtah Idaho Subscription rates: and Sunday month vada Wyoming daily risewhet year inandadvance $12: 8105 in U Sunday month 8125 daily CaAh— db1 Carry I DELIVERY FOR 3160 I Dial I WALLPAPER w (Ithod E 4r CLEAN Officas Handy 257 3273 ILI The biggest stocks In town enable us to offer the lowest prices still have on hand beautiful framed pictures which are being sold cheap We 6 East I 1st S i PICTURE FRAMING lend-leas- 7 : CLEANED LIKE NEW - 7 er I r le I s ILPM 11 during the month 12 from north-singern India on Japanese communlcations in northern Burma 22 from other Indian bases and 14 from bases in China) forces) exKalachaung was struck by bombs and incendiary plosive from a mixed fighter and bomber squadron while a locomotivein and the three cars' were damaged Toungoo attack the British report said A fighter patrol over Vie Don- - a baik battle area and across the I mouth of the Mayu river brought down two Japanese fighters and damaged several others - --- - - t-- ne Y - e-- Ti-H- N it- war flared over Burma SatNEW DELHI Feb 14 (JP)--- Air urday as ground fighting slackened vilAllied bombers and fighters struck at the Japanese-hel- d lage of Kalachaung on the Mayu peninsula pounded the railroad in the Toungoo area and shot down two Japanese planes while communique said today ground fire bagged a third a British L -- — (Brigadier General Clayton Bissell commanding the Tenth which the Japanese radto had ad15 S air force in China Burma mitted loss of 400 lives and near and India reported in a delayed hits on a fourth ship) ( Bissel said American nidispatch from Bombay that his fliers in January destroyed 13 ers had carriedeout 48 missions Kai-shek- 's --1 Lake Tribune K:"::S N El NWE2 SOMEWHERE IN AUSTRA'1111::"E ve16: UrIN ? SOLOMON IS iv LIA Feb 14—During the battle 3 co 41 1:) for Buna stacks- of empty yellow (717 'r 11114p- 'mail 4ko cans shirt by day grew larger day tri A cA :t The Australian takes a curious t' ' at the field hospital and advance GUADALCANAL IINDI ES He goes in looking sloppy ftrst aid stations in the American pride DARWI N around with his coat unbuttoned sectors The cans were containers and his hat on the back of his for blood plasma that had been Coral 0anA-Ahead but he does shine his shoes era'Ined into the veins of wounded Sea —Cr boots as they are called down American soldiers STATUTE MILES under Every Australian kid is Battalion aid stations at Buna AT EQUATOR from were set up under the screening taught to shine his shoes a brush to able lift he's the time of trees in ahead still on Pacific is the only jungle camouflage the allies have won new bases (dark areas) he never gets over it few hundred yards behind the fir-''1Illhough Aerial —'i t was still cold attacks in the Solomons and a drive and New the in Guinea and Guadalcanal (2) (1) when American 5 inrcline At these stations littersa from India against Akyab (arrow) are only troops arrived last March so the aryChina's difficult task of sending troops fr!m the front were lifted upon Dr foremost jurist unithe beginning of the struggle in the Pacific troops wore their trim woolen crude framework made of jungle enemy bases is in charge of Chung-hu- i strong against Wang : warm — when — But it forms — they translations of the book into sevgot 1:rnbs and surgeons gave the blossomed out in clean well eral wounded men their first shots of foreign languages of half a mile or more by litter cotton trousers and pressed China the volume will cost In plasma serum neata tucked necktie with shirts Casualties usually reached aid over tortuous jungle paths to port dollars—far less than Chinese five ly in the shirt front At the stations 10 to 30 minutes after able operatinKhospitals of the average Chinese the price The Aussies couldn't believe book The committee said the brought hospitals bloodplasma often was they were injured menWhen on soldiers? Neckties their eyes had already in the wounded generalissimo spent an average of administered For what? been bandaged and had received again day on the manuIn the collected Blood plasma The diggers explained that they three hours a in November 1942 morphine and Pu Ifanilimide from United States starting of the to fight in their uniforms scriptvolume have medtcal corps men in the firing Red Cross is under auspices contains eight chap-The conin tin Yanks We said do the too" packed among other things aptainers Each can is divided into That was too much for the Aus- ters and WASHINGTON Feb 14 (211 — (Continued From Page One) If the injury was serious-enougto Chinese youth to prepare anpeals who one of war two for the sections minister tralian yellow rePresident Roosevelt' s recent to cause any important degree of reconstruction after the war nounced that the Australian uni- for plasma the other for dis- that concentrated aerial bombardmore to st ock or loss of blood plasma was spongy It that young Chinese to prepare urges goods congress vvas port review under needles and water Tubing form position ment may render it relatively useFor tilled to become admstered immediately betto primary school teachChina by with the object of designing a and administering less if not untenable now were being sent rnen with gaping wounOs and shat- for preparing ers lower administration officials completely serum are with ter over the the been sent had looking job packed tered bones it restored- bu:k and eachplasma for the enemy In such event the air than The Australian girls had some frontier workers engineers and tin was Burma road amplibalance in the blood stream and officially remain could Plasma in tins will keep indefi- Japs place their thing to do with this—they aviators "luickly counteracted the effects of nitely is not affected by liance on the Short land section as fied Sunday with the statement !thought those American uniforms temperashock can be transported as a buffer for the growing American that most Burma road shipments looked pretty nice After ore or more shots of plas- tures and N consisted of supplies for improvcanned beef strength in Guadalcanal ma men with terrible injuries were easily as men and a parallel road the itself reing Buna at injured Many Bodies Counted a ble to survive painful journeys Course in Swing Set railway ceived five plasma injections One Jap The office of war information said that the The communique wounded soldier received LONDON Feb 14 (iP) — Staid badly N1)-PLR THREE a statement which J made in were the 6066 killed MADRID Feb 14 (An—Archpublic 1913-4in 1110ND Japanese several of tins NT TRE oF Cr plasma days offensive Cambridge is going to have a eight 15 Franklin Ray chief of the Chinese course OR REDEMPTION 0TICE OF CALL A beginning week's music wil recover his January in from and wounds bishop Francis J Spellman of New ers wer cei:t Treasury e adminis- discussion swing The figure a navy spokesman said branchof the will be included in a York pausing here en route to and Others Ceyhcerned: doctors The ht 1941-4that figure nearly nhtice ts hereby htven that al half the based on an actual count of tration presented at a closed ws- program at Village college of the Vatican City officiated Sunday at ivitstar-tIriinjured soldiers will reed was 31 per ce:A 'Treasury 3)TVIS bodies The final date on which a ion of the house foreign affairs university in April so men and public mass in Madrid cathedral nateel Jr 15 1927 are here plasma of 1943-4- 7 most and of injettions tnr renernht!em hn June 15 194A calel was Count made was not given committee during consideration of women in youth service can con- at the invitation of Bishop Eijo these will require more than one err tstkch elate interest on etien honcis e act's extension but effective enemy resistance the of Ga ray sider some of the of dose The total plasma 2 F5::1 intnrrnaton regarling the prese9 so that "With reference to the presi- music and drama principles ceased about U S Ambassador Calton Hayes amateur for February tlnr reabout the ht the taJts total ntate 1171 onrrer-linjections equals rue tnungt the offensive apparently lasted ap- dents recent statement concern- presentatio7 eenentnri untler this call and Mrs Hayes were present men of wounded number Nr ciatea 6e6 Circuar e Juy suping the volume of proximately four weeks 21 Te use ofofplasma 'has reduced r henrts vctr he reteernel at par said ''I Some probRay explain plies" might stragglers Japanese blood battle front nht be tferert other nee the number roacft' was in while Burma the out the are that E hf States in exchange transfusions hiding jungles Banks of whole ably ter their aled bnnets Therefore open our first and main efforts blood must be kcpt at an even and ridges and ravines 110Pr1ENTRAIT SR HNFY e now in here at were devoted to SeeretarY nf the Treasury and are not good mopping up operations temperature rEPARTUENT score more a and supplies add few materials progress may providing Aklaehfrrter lwhen more than 12 days old rehrusry 11 1941 for improving the road itself and killed and captured to the total decline to estiNav railway line gliis mate tYhePoverall figure of Japa- emphPasis was at the expense of nese killed in land fighting on Gua- goods intended for use within dalcanal A check of communiques China which could not be shipped showed that up to January 15 the all the way in until communica: L Over the enemy dead as reported on an tions were improved 7 '' reached airline we have been able to dee' actucount of bodiehad total-t1 - J4--fta k e o 7085 That would give a liver a larger volume of was no claim goods tot actual use in China than There 13151 of date ' i isti 15 traversed the Burma road" however that the iamm"'too ' --commeans were 1I 9 '''' any by figures Ray reported that both air and ' estimates in dis- land cargo andsome facilities for supplying plete 1:) (4004 - ' :r' from the southwest Pacific China are "being greatly increased : k patches a ii'? ' ' 4 have placed the enemy dead as during the current six months" "I i atk 'e Si ” & ' high as 20000 including not only He also said that a number of new 'N k7j counted but also air fields have been completed at those of actually millions men coming home young Imagine - ''2se:oo- to been killed both the Indian and Chinese ends t 144 ''''''4 Aki have believed those t"' st : and every one of them - : by American artillery fire and - of the air route and more planes within one year r ' aerial strafing and bombardment are being assigned and mentioned 1 W: st' f ' "new roads" 1 needing a complete civilian outfit right avkay! --- 416 Issue on March 12 Copyright by Chicago Tribune CHICAGO Feb 14—One of the things that 'amazed the Australians when the Yanks arrived was the quality and neatness of the American uniforms They even have creases in their pants" one digger observed disguestedly The Australian soldier is a tough egg and he likes to look it He woolen uniform has an which looks as though it were cut out with a hatchet and for the tropics shorts and a sleeveless re ISLANDS : 4' ! A (PHILIPPINE i N Prepared for 4 WAKE ez iin" ifs A ' ::: 401s r - - v - '- - 11' -- RANGOON 44 14 v-- — v : :$ C f:t--- - ::'' - 1FOR v :: ilOcean Road 1 Jap Several Damaged Says Report From New Delhi Over Million Copies Creases in Panu Neat Ties Cause Lifting of Brows iiPacific :! jrC-CHUNGKI- Serum Saves Lives Of Many Men Wounded at Buna Exclusive YO tjLI t7 S TU — 1 Blood Plasma Proves U S Ar11117 Boon UniformsChiang's Book' Air War Flares Over Promises to Bring 'Ohs' Burma ToNyn Rail Hit From Aussies Hit Sales Peak Two Planes Sh6t Down Difficult: Task Faces Allies in Pacific JAPAN 144TOK CHINA ca It Cake trributtei Monday ISEllsa CT III G L 5 :::soTv 2 G Co 7TaTI 19 0 7:1 West 1 st Phon 47 r ''!"-- 1 G7 4thZast ts Taind 1 East S 178 01 South aaee dal f: No 2d W s I :: lend-leas- - ( I 1 1' lend-leas- ! ¶REAF--12R- ellevt up Wa4- time qt04zeiz 1 10 E R I1 (: i-- lend-leas- 1 ! : 1 r - 4 tt i W q 1 -- f I 1 N'skte ' ' -- t I N 4 - " 1 a ' 1 '1 ' --- i -1: Ilz 1 t g 11 11 i tt :Al Becker's together -- - 1 ‘7 - - c t fie17-V- t pILSEIIER 1 '' L r44t - t:!11L 4 3 41-- - - 1 I f 't r I " i : 1 1 11 1 r ' C--- T I flb 4' 0' "I e ' 3 ' Y" -- tf7– 1 4' 1 A i x ti t !:' ' ' ! !1')" Er fp 4 s) - o a 440 (II Aorta miming 5 t x -- : 4 4 Loki re py LONDON Feb -!- -- It L' 444444A0401 'o'r)"4'' ''' '14 4 14 (JP—Reuters in a dispatch t iie 10 '6' w '1' t' e —- Disributort PINNEY BEVERAGE CO llt-A- ' --- 533 Soul dith --- Wsl 77777 1 M Pearl Harbor He has been serving as an instructor of advanced flying at Jacksonville Fla during the past few months His wife is now residing in Jacksonville with him - annoy ' i ' elaraglmiWW1 zee' Buy 7 ' ‘ --- - d f'' ( Your Home - e ' c---- eJ-- - --: ' --- : g 44--'-:4- - -- s-- 4 - N DO IT WITH LOW RATE DESERET FEDERAL LOANS Deseret The progressive Federal is ready to finance your new home the old one or loan you money to build or remodel War Housing units Plenty of money availablecon-at low Interest rates venient schedulett Includ- ' I : LU DESERET iturnm And Loan &made i Priced from Iii 0 A ttA ) I Ui I 1 ‘ i i 1 I ! 77 -- (k s k ‘ nt ' ) X - - ''a' ' s Ar0'—- -r -- f1I1 -- Iti 5t!'0 --- - Ir I Illir-L- ---- e I i i - 1- I 1‘- —1 i -- 't1 I i I I I ' 7:1 It N'""tanoll tt t I it I i i i i I I 1 I ' f eraw410 I i i i 1 1 — i i t 1::1 1 ! 4 I :: :' i I i 11 1 ' I l --- 1 1 I E—4-t-- I7J — 71 I 1 moomm I:4 (11(1:P1 i t c- I 1‘' H:31-- - if i I 1 il I 1:1 41e:'''''702'r'-''- 7 r 1 --- IMPOFtMlPadMNIMINNMI i k vri ! I - I k i i 11 p - a Association tzztuy SOUTH MAIN 11 11 - t r --- -N - t Co2 - I -- $4250 - 3” CAP 44 -I IL- ti h 'i TIJI li' 208 210 So -- 17:11 ELL °Iran Mai n St 0 le At ' - - i r -- t5 - 1 -- - 0 v‘ 7 1 r"44' ! N1le I I t 1 - L" "t 1 1 1t) - t t i I 4 i - - !c t ! - So004 091 £4 1 t ' sAvEuis iel 1os WPM L ! ' i -I 1 Marx Suits Are The Long Wearing Kind Hart Schaffner ing taxeso interest and re-In tirement of principal one fixed small monthly payment Inquire today 1 I 1 ' iriy e- : - INSURED '':7 10 A g - 1 ' 1 When you buy clothes get ' good clothes so that even one suit ill let you step aside for Johnny' The ssay things are going no one can tell vshen to look for him back A good guess is that the war's end will be as sudden and unexpected as its outbreak )- - 3 1 :- wit- NS - 6-H11- 1644 it I - REP- Al I CE ir "' tk i BUILD - It seems to us that the thing for those who are not going into the armed services to do i S be prepared ‘ith enough good long wearing clothing so that they can step aside when Johnny comes marching home and let him have the clothes 0 ' 0 output? ' wloomtMMKRIllinMIEMPRIMININ4 -:i! In Bigelow Is a Ensign Lave son of Mr and Mrs Percival Bigelow of 599 North University avenue Provo He was born in Provo and attended Provo public schools and the Brigham Young university He married Avalon Christensen of Provo three days before the Japanese attack on 11 1 's IMINIPIIIIMINIIIIIIMIEW'-easemeeeseeesee04------ ) — ) 1- 'rt (i flights Lieutenant Sorensenhas been in the navy for more than a year He formerly was a student at the University of Utah 1 a SoF '' ! 1- Et -- "6( I? i:-- - CO ' - - : ':i-- L- y) : ' f 1 '' $ t f i ' 'i' 4fi '1)--- 4 ic:: L ' !! t- II 1 ' '''''') - I i' t"A pi 1 ! jg) William T Sorensen received his air medal award for tracing an enemy submarine in Mazan bay on August 31: 1942 according to word received by his parents Mr and Mrs A J T Sorensen of Bountiful As patrol commander he was in charge of a flight of three planes which sighted the submarine However after the two other planes had been forced out of the chase Lieutenant Sorensen's plane continued to track the sub until a United States naval ship was able to sink it He also was awarded the navy cross for extraordinary service in Kiska harbor from June 10 to June 20 during which he destroyed three enemy seaplanes and his plane was pierced by 100 enemy bullets and shrapnel during the Lieutenant olliRicon i) 16: UTAH OGDEN Reuters Reports On Rommel Injury r c ti PRODUCTS ' 0 1) L (34i-9 1I h 1 - al 4 ' 1ko 11 BECKER -- 3 i!i :7 - Share a bottle of i - a:ft-- 1 ---- iti ) ) i 6Z" - Where are they going to get the clothes unless the men who didn't go into the armed services can step aside for a time anti let the returned fighters have the nation's complete from allied headquarters in north Africa that the French intelliFrom rage One) (Continued gence staff had lost track of a group of men decorated at Gen- Field Marshal Rommel' s moveeral MacArthur's headquarters in ments two weeks ago agency correspondent addAustralia He vvas cited for meri- ed The "this lends that torious achievement after particito a report he was credncwounded pating in more than 25 operational a raid on Gabes and now is i in a missions before last November in- hospital in Tunis but there is no authoriconfirmation from cluding long range bombing mis- tative allied source" any ‘ sions - 1I --- 4- tonight! o -s- Arait-- with your dinner 0 t - 14 :--' 11 :07--i- ning this war It ''- - 1 i f c I Our applause for the men who hold down jobs and jhelp do the makhouse work ing it possible for wo men also to engage in wartime activities That's the kind of teamwork that's win- - 1 ( 1 '4 i i "tia:1- 0 I ' I T: ---- elt) I t l ' ' Iladtie dill 9Eat a w4cad I I 1 'L---- 'a a l 1 4': ' ' V i ' Three Utahns Get Army Navy Medals ' o d §t: '4 - a V 1 1 i I ' 6-— ' ' 11' 4 t ' 7r' 1 1 ' ' 4 ' rrr'1 " -- IT' 1 a i) - 4711iii k ' 1 1k :' 4 I I ' z to STOP Buying Clothes pre-Janua- ry s F WHEN THE WAR ENDS That Will Be The Time r F t |