Show — I ' t I Cot Book Two I 1 ' of War nation Book Twn continues today Obtain it as sorNn after 10 a in as possible from any Salt Lake tigh school or after 4 p m at elementary schools I'llitt-lbutio- n ir7 1 -0 I 1 Jp) '''''' ri A II I 11 - t f -- ) a Logi" 1 n444100 t n ID U S Assigns Wickard Reilloves Limits Russ Capture On U Production Big Nazi Troops to grain Aid Farmers Base at Sumy 1 :Ati WASHINGTON Feb 23 (P)- -With American civilians facing diets containing more cereals Roosevelt Flays Cry for Crop Work Furloughs Secretary of Agriculture Wick- ard Tuesday removed rigid limitations on the production of wheat Acting under emergency provisions of the A A A crop control law the food administrator suspended marketing quotas which restricted the sale use V4acisted By Pres and feeding of wheat tinder WVHINGTON Feb 23—The' quotas farmers were free to sell use or only that wheat irmyrordered troops to pick cot- grown underfeedtheir control tnn in Arizona Tuesday andl planting allotmentscropMI heat last year on acreages in President Roosevelt indicated he grown excess of such allotments were hoped this action would still the subject to a penalty tax of 51 clamor- in congress for the' cents a bushel The penalty would have been around 60 cents armed services to furlough all on the 1943 crop Wickard said the nation would experienced farm hands need considerably more wheat The chief executive commented' than was heretofore expected for tit his press conference on the (whuman consumption for manueer uhich climaxed a series of facture of industrial alcohol for moves on the food! war purposes and for feeding livestock production front including also Wickard also changed the 1943 the lifting of marketing quotas on farm program to allow farmers to increase plantings of wheat Wheat without being penalized Farm'Don't Think Clearly' ers who plant at least 90 per Without referring directly to the cent of their goals for cringressiortal MrI war crops — such as potatoes controversy said many people didl - so-call- ed rot rot tThnk things through It be wise he said to assign farm work to a division needing only of training before Forre 1 employed cultural-wor- But there were s i I he indicated Every instance Urban County Bloc vaould have to be treated as an in- davidaal case Loses Fight Again The army disclosed that white and Negro soldiers would move For Reapportionino tnto the long staple cotton fields to help harvest this "indispensable ' After one of the most bitter war material" and that similar of the current legislative action would be taken if necessary fights session the house of representaIwath regard to vital crops se- tives Tuesday defeated a second in the nation attempt to pass a bill which would The lifting of the restrictions on have given Weber Davis Salt the marketing of wheat was an- - Lake and 'Utah counties an addl I nounced by Secretary of Agricul- - tional five members in the lower i' ture Wickard He said the aim was house of the legislature The bill was voted down Morn to assure adequate wartime sup- i plies for human consumers and day then reconsidered Tuesday and defeated for the second time livestock over charges of the proponents I Other Action Taken that the house was repudiating the clear mandate of the constiIn other actions bearing on the tution for a reapportionment after s:tuation: fod census decennial each 1 Wnekard and John W Studea contest between repwas It baker federal education commis- - resentatives of the four predomi- that 500000 to nantly urban "inside" counties and sioner announced -65004:14) victory farm volunteers " the largely rural "outside" counprincipally high school boys and ties with the latter declaring in garla woaid be recruits for farm effect that they would not give dUreteg the sprirg and sum- - up their present control of the ! work rner 'months ' house without a fight constitution Representative Rogers (R) - or no constitution Massachusetts introduced legislaOn the senate side the tion cani-- g for creation of a von- - developments of the day were:major Ap- unIary war farm corps of youths !pointment of a sifting committee and women tto take over all bills on the calenThe office of price administra- - dar Wednesday morning: appoint tion established ceilaega on eg rnent of a committee on appointPs at the wholesale level and rnents receipt from the governor would be of his interim Fa id fixed "mark-ups- " and later The ceilings vary advancement ofappointments a bill to authorize frean city to city Officials said the state board of education to they would mean a slight decrease shorten or otherwise adjust school tr present costs to consumers but terms to relieve the help shortage d a higher average price in food production and processing cif one to two cents a dozen an- T h e sifting committee - - e f! : : ' -r-- arced year-aroun- nounced by President Grant Mac- e at the close of the farlane house laid aside a bill to sion is comoosed of Senators Dexrernove some of the rennrictions ter Farr Ogden: Alonzo F cf the A A A crop control law per- - Hokin (D)(D) Woodruff: James A ta--to peanuts wheat and corn McMitrrin (D) Logan: George A The agrteulture department as Christensen (D) and Lynn S we'll as a number of legislators had Richards (D) Salt Lake City Mcbackea the measure but it was re- (Continueri nn pap Nine) column One perted that the department now main to its provision put piarned lAky Bill sea-Th- -z - i under effect emergency clausent in the crop control law In fact thP wheat provisions 'were rnet by Wickarcis order diwith regard to marketing In addition to this prc1as oNnn the bill would lift corn higher ad set marketarg a- - as frir queoatnuta encourage 4 fo oil r reee pr oau aton The legislA ian had been HSSaild by ItePTP- D a Missouri Eter!R t!l f Cannon anieng oteers CRI111011 called it a beneficial z rolang measure" ta enlv a comparatively small farmrap Speaker flayburn anroanceA that the vote was being postpored until advice could de-bereeeived from the agriculture on how the legislation partment r1-- ! N adniinistered Some mem- bers sani privately however that teev theuzht Wickard's action re- wheat meant all crop pro- dactian reaarictions might be lifted that possibly the legislation is unnecessary Approed by Roosevelt Lieutenant General Joseph T disclosed in testimony IlNarney to a senate agriculture subcom- rv:tc-that the order for soldiers to help harvest the long staple co:ton crep in Arizona was taken tira'!er a general program for emer- genev uae cf trocps on farms He said Secetary of War Stim- Itrr submitted the plan to Presi- dAr t noasevelt Monday and re- ce‘e the chief executive's ap- proval It provides for furloughing of entre military units for use tinder regelar afficers in gather- k-- e - i a e tfaakonal crop IT Tr nt G- cri Ram-m- - Two Other Cities North Is est of t: Ti e BIZERTE i Sea iMediterranean - - -- : nu -- ::::: Tabarkai " m a t ob r i: r : ::::: La Calte - it: t80110 By United PITS -- - ' sok Li i I 23 Feb WASHINGTON Stabilization (UM—Economic Director James F Byrnes believes a responsible press should exercise vigilance to insure that negative criticism of "bureaucrats and brasshats" does not undermine public confidence in the government In an address delivered before the American - Society of Newspaper Editors- on February 13 and not released for publication until Tuesday night he said "We must not let the public in a critical period of total war lose confidence in the neeesaary administrative instrumentalities of total war" "Scold the bureaucrats and brasshats as we do we need them" he said "Without bureaucrats and brasshats we cannot win a total war" He defended the performance of both civilian and military leaders asserting that most heads of war agencies "never entered a bureau until this war" and that the tactical genius and statesmanship of the heads of the armed forces merit great confidence "You may think some one or more of these military and civilian leaders deserve criticism And should receive it: Byrnes Of course you should said i - - -- 4- -- - -- t --' 4---a- 4 -- - AC- g -----ri -- ‘z - -sf t iii : Ilr ro 'AA'' r 1y---5if c - t 1 ' N : - 2' ' - JGu0 TUNISIA 5r I1 I - i 1 r7-71 - 0 an Hui 11C) 9 0 1 I t British I hurl Back Germans Within Fon: Miles of Goal American Planes Help Check Thrust w - tank-infantr- 500-poun- d low-flyin- that Train Wreck In Delaware Injures 46 UP)---- enemy-occupie- 500-pou- ce - Americans' Savings Reach High in 1942 all-hig- h rt i t 4-- :75' ::' I 1 :: I - i ':I:7 -- Navy Reveals Sinking of Two Axis Subs Knox Warns U S Menace Fails to Diminish U-Bo- at U By United Press U-bo- U-bo- at U-bo- ts (Column Two) Three Laval Demands Aid to Nazis DERN Switzerland Feb 23 (2P) —Striving to meet a nazi demand for another 250000 French workmen Pierre Laval's government has threatened to refuse food cards to men who do not register for such work This- threat was voiced in French and meanwhile the newspapers Geneva Journal said that many French workers were already engaged by the Germans in building fortifications along the Atlantic coast and the Russian plains Laval's controlled press lauded his "accomplishments" but indicated there were difficulties in complying with German demands for more workers The Petit Dauphinois of Grenoble Monday and Tuesday warned soldiers sailors and airmen demobilized last November 10 that failure to register for work would mean refusal of food cards and make them liable to a fine up to 1000 francs and prison sentence of a month to a year - ' : 1 : ! frontier WASHINGTON Feb 23 — The navy revealed Tuesday that two axis submarines were sunk in night duels with American gun crews but Secretary Frank Knox tempered the news with a warning that Germany is building "much faster than we are them" sinking ' In one of its rare announcements of enemy submarine losses the navy said an American destroyer "completely destroyed" a in the Atlantic and that the gun crew of a crippled U S merchantman sent a Japanese submarine to the bottom in the Pacific Both battles were fought on the surface No dates were given Knox at a press conference said the submarine still is "most emphatically" a very grave menace —a warning which echoed Mon' day's disclosure that more than 850 American servicemen and civilians were lost in the torpedoing of two U S merchantmen in the north Atlantic early this month "There's nothing on which to hope for predicate any sanguine early stoppage or cure" he said Sinkings Decline He urged vast production of destroyers and escorts as one approach to the problem He said every available measure is being taken to reduce the menace and that the rate of American ships sunk this month in the Atlantic was less than last month "But" he cautioned"we mustn't build too much on that The rate goes up and down The present lull may be due to the weather" Asked whether the Germans faster than were building the allies are sinking them he replied: "I'm confident of that But it is only a surmise of course" (The Germans devoting virtually all their shipbuilding facilities to submarine construction reputat edly are turning out the rate of 15 to 25 a month They are believed to have as many as 200 in the Atlantic) Other Subs Sunk Knox declined to reveal the number of enemy submarines destroyed thus far He did say however that "no doubt there have been other sinkings" Official navy a nnounctments have listed eight destroyed Japanese submarines These include the one announced Tuesday as sunk in the south Pacific The lap raider got in the which first punch aon torpedo Pna (Continue(' :!: 1 up supplies and reinforcements Dangerous Thrust Halted In the hills north of the Kasserine gap Rommers most dangerous thrust had been halted by British and American tanks and infantry fourto miles from Thala the strategic Krethe gateway mansa plateau near the Tunisian-Algeria- n As the Germans tried desperjuncately to gain the Thala road tion 25 miles northwest of Kasserine British tanks and American in one gunners held on stubbornly of the bitterest battles of the Tu- nisian war At the same time Flommers attack toward the west in central Tunisia was beaten back by allied troops which were supported by strong American' air 40units tanks moA nazi column of torized Infantry and mobile guns driving from Kasserine pass to-of ward Tebessa 12 miles westwas border the Tunisian-Alegria- n turned back by American fire late Monday on the winding road near Djebel Hamma While American guns poured & stream of shells Into the advancing column American warplanes bombed it in continuous relays The force withdrew after losing many tanks and suffering a "considerable number" of Casualties Fighters and bombers of the Twelfth U S air force participated in more than 20 missions Monday y attack on the Kasin an serine bottleneck Tanks Trucks Destroyed At least six tanks and 10 trucks were destroyed by Boston bombers which left many other vehicles burning Lightning and Airacobra fighters'andshot up enemy guns trucks troops atBilly Mitchell bombers alsonear tacked an important bridge obthe Kasserine gap but clouds scured the results As the fighting died down after the the Germans had been dealtTuniseverest punishment of the sian campaign some observers be speculated that Rommel might forced to give up his plans for establishing a forward line on the Kasserine pass He now has made three armored bids to take Tebessa all of Which have resulted in a mauling of his spearheads There was no specific report Tuesday on the ground activities of the British Eighth army last disclosed to be attackigkg outposts of the Mareth line i southern Tunisia but an allied headquarters communique referring to action on other fronts Monday's said -- our patrols have been active and successfully repulsed the and enemy whenever encountered have taken prisoners in several :7 1 : - ':' ' a I 1 f''17 1 1 :::14 1 z:? :' ii : 77! 1 ' IL - 6 - 0 places" 'Churchill? Stop Nazis It was disclosed also that n British Churchill tanks had been front sebrought to the Tunisian and had been rushed into cretly in the central sector action apMaking their unexpectedbefore pearance on theeastplains of Thala— Sbiba 20 miles much to the surprise of the Germans—nine Churchills engaged 14 nazi tanks and destroyed four of them with a loss of only one of their own The allied communique also announced that bombers and fighters from allied bases attacked a convoy of two supply ships with naval and air escort off the Tunisian coast Monday One of the supply three of the ships was sunk and were shot down protecting planes said adding that the communique 11 allied planes were lost in the day's heavy aerial activity g 40-to- ON THE TUNISIAN FRONT Feb 22 (Delayed) (RS—Forty-to- n Churchill tanks newly turned out of British factories have : been brought up secretly toto this front help stop and rushed into action German advances in the south These infantry tanks similar to those used by the Canadian forces in the Dieppe raid last August were suddenly turned out on the plains before Sbiba It was a surprise to the Germans who had no idea the British First army had Churchills drawn up and ready for a critical moment like this i - ! - - - - t - t - - — - 'fr r - - f - - - ' " - all-da- N - t Associated Press ALLIED HEADQUARTERS IN NORTH AFRICA Feb 23--Hurled back in one sector and stalled in another the German armored units of Marshal Erwin Rommel relaxed their presaure along the Tunisian front Tuesday giving the stubborn allied defense forces their first rest of the bitter three-da- y struggle to keep nazi spearheads from cracking their lines The fighting ha a died down" said a terse dispatch from the front and both sides apparently prepared to make the most of the lull by regrouping and bringing Allies--(Official)--- st Nation's Chief Allies Damage Parries Quiz Jap Warship On 2nd Front Set Dock Afire - Price Five Cents r? Mediez 4 '':-'' I unis LONDON Feb 23 NIS Russia's el ktrA :::: :::: -red army captured the big German — 1 --4 k :: i 4' two base and of other iblbaloppt: Sunny key Guelman The Utah legislature recenttowns northwest of Kharkov Tues00 ly passed a concurrent resolurlirr"412P:44kday climaxing a series of victories 'wota''1 : '4''''''K eerifA BoujFont tion urging the release of "hot it which have the advanced soviets wheat" in Millard county for 82 miles in seven ' ' 't rat bras ' fr days '4i' SOUSSE livestock feeding and adjust-' 1 4 In one day the Russians by their abusselii ' -i ment of quotas Sponsors assertclik4 : el:'-new two in cut railroads the gains ed that while wheat storage fa-- 4 cilities were glutted in that complicated interlocking system ''''--- 0 Shiba Nt nut and between Kiev and Kharkov kKi county railroad space was being PolPichon 49 t themselves of miles within i 1la i 1 i:14i4 t? I used to transport wheat froni I) Tha an essential anchor point in Faid - other sections of the country to tava German defense line short of any 1 '''' t Li feed Millard county livestock rez'ITebeSSa z A7‘1The wheat already stored there theA Dniener river a iVirr AK P S Ser i ne 14 p special Russian high command ' I )1414' illb could not be used for feed with02- commuri ique broadcast by Moscow out payment of the penalty un1 BoSuidziid radio and recorded here announced 40't) iVTtr' til Tuesday's action F erianS The senate was notified of the the capture of Sumy Akhtyrka '' and Lebedin : Maknassy action in a telegram from RepAt Sumv 8 miles northwest of resentative Walter K Granger Kharkov the Russians captured a to State Senator Claud Hirschi 0 '!'' ' ø71'4‘9 3 ' Hi! city of 63900 people site of the of Hurricane biggest sHgar refinery in the so- )STATUTE Gabes i viet union Locations Given Allied forces were reported Tuesday to have fought off RomAkhtvrka is 61 miles mel's troops near the outskirts of Thala (1) important rail of Kharkov and 42 miles junction Another nazi column pointed at Tebessa allied south of Sumy and Lebedin is 83 miles northwest of Kharkov and base in Algeria and still another aimed at Shiba Bou 27 miles southwest of Sumy Arada (2) provides a vital allied link with British forces With the capture of Lebedin the to the north Shading shows approximate allied territory Russians had driven 82 miles westKharkov-Moscorailof the ward road in the one week since the fall of Kharkov Congressman Finds The Russians announced also the capture of Maloarchanzelsk 41 Decoys miles south of Orel junction point Him and Colleagues of the southern and central fronts An arc was closing on Orel from east and southeast the WASHINGTON Feb 23—(2n— The northeast Germans Tuesday reported a Grim gray antiaircraft "guns" new Russian attack from the Bombers Attack Declines to Reply which have peeked skywards for north in the direction of the red months from congressional office army base of Belev 60 miles away Just before the special communiEnemy Ships Directly to building roofs to provide "protec- que was issued Moscow broadcast tion" for the nation's lawmakers that the Russians had also capIn Rabaul Area Stalin's Complaint are made of wood and manned by tured a big inhabited place south y despite ferocious "decoy soldiers" it was disclosed of Orel counterattacks WASHINGTON Feb 23 CPI — Allies—(Of fitial ) which cost Tuesday declaration that Stalin's the Germans heavily Joseph By Associated Pres: His curiosity piqued over just e t h whole was Russia ALLIED HEADQUARTERS IN carrying what protection was being fur- Anniversary Victories war because of the AUSTRALIA of the weight Feb Wednesday nished congress The new Russian gains came on lack of a second front in Europe Representative crews Fortress (D) North Carolina the red army's twenty-fift- h Cooley birth- produced no direct reaction from climbed unchallenged in civilian day and the ninety-sixt- h bombs on of a President Roosevelt but planted three day to new clothes the rooftop of its winter offensive which had been he did say that he Tuesday or large de- a cruiser Winston and Japanese office building and discovered the acclaimed as unparalleled in his- Churchill had agreed on a second stroyer at Rabaul in New Britain secret tory in sorts of north Africa and Tuesday while front g TuesHe told the house about it Douglas The day before capturing Tros- that this was opened to retire Havocs forced the day during discussion of a billion tyanets 30 miles south of Sumy enemy cona told The press dollar naval shore construction the Russians had consolidated the ference president he had not read the Rus- fa rther toward Mubo on New bill Expressing the hope that left and right flanks of their Orel sian premier's order of the day Guinea none of the money would be spent and the right flank of the commemorating the twenty-fift- h The day saw General Douglas for the construction of "painted army on the Dnieper army advancing He MacArthur's men attacking Japred of the army anniversary a ocean—or for ships upon painted Now they were in position to said he had noted the headlines anese bases and along wooden guns" he cried: strike at Vorozhba and Poltava on Stalin's reference to a second an arc extending positions from Timor to "We are being protected by and in taking them remove two front but he told reporters they New Britain wooden guns and decoy soldiers (Continuo(' on Pare Three) The only enemy retaliation the knew what headlines were One Column In high heavens' name why have A reporter said that Stalin's noon communique added was a our over been heads? placed they statements indicated after light raid over the Milne bay area I am something of a duck hunter which caused insignificant casualred the has the nazis army pushed exand when I place out decoys I ties out of he Russian would territory pect to attract ducks And when After dropping a number of 500- be through No Mr Roosevelt reI place out decoy soldiers and debombs on shipping at Ra- not pound did And Stalin that say plied to would I attract expect coy guns baul the Fortresses braved intense he the that stick press suggested enemy planes" fire and dazzling to the premier's language and not antiaircraft "Gentlemen it was a gruesome to blast the waterto searchlights it amid try as he Again interpret house the complained sight" a bit of laughter he said he had front area roared a mixture of amusement In New Guinea allied planes not read Stalin's declaraftion and amazement Later he told Feb 21 WILMINGTON Del and afternoon Told that the Saturday Evening made morning newsmen that the guns were "as d over ter46 sweeps least was perPost in an article (Wednesday) that as wooden Charlie McCarthy" saying and "our are air attacks n ritory d a he Winston Churchill had The war clepartment in response sons many of them service men forcing the enemy back from his to inquiries said that use of were injured early Wednesday promised Stalin to open a second forward positions in the direction frort in 1913 the president in- of Mubo" dummy gun positions — moved when a nine-ca- r railthe war bulletin dePennsylvania — was a cusabout frequently quired where they got that story claredsouthbound train road passenger He said he did not think they had tomary procedure in preventing Our heavy bombers 'attacked was struck been reading any secret files of an ac(- from Philadelphia enemy agents from gaining enemy shipping and shore installatwo-caContIrvied on Pe Four) r train the Casablanca meeting or been tions just from the rear by a before dawn scoring (Column Five) secret decoding any messages as it waited for a signal near the three direct hits with bombs on a cruiser or large deWilmington station and hits within 25 feet stroyer Forty passengers had beento taken Vice President Accepts of a 7000-to- n INicargo vessel" Gento Delaware hospital six noon communieral MacArthur's an unknown and trningto8 hospital Latin America Bid que reported on the Rabaul raid number to Memorial hospital and "Fires were started along the an hour later six ambulances and WASHINGTON Feb 23 and in Ataliklikun waterfront seven police cars remained at the Vice Presideni-Wallasaid Tues- bay two schooners were be free to see that they get It strafed scene he has accepted invitations to from low altitude IntenSe anti"We should criticize what we New Cas- day the from Ambulances fire was encountered But before we tle Delaware army air balie were visit Costa Rica Chile Bolivia aircraft think wrong Colombia Ecuador Panama and throughout the attack" we should fly into criticism poThe summoned those among 'about the middle of March" A single allied bomber pause to consider whether we lice sent out a general call for Peru He expects to attend the launch- fought it out heavy with 10 Jap fighters could devise a fairer system or as physicia of the Tropical Institute of shooting down two and perhaps rule to take care of our own First reports said that only one ing In Costa Rica and three over Portuguese Timor and Agriculture difficulties and the difficulties to be was known a sailor of rubber successfully carried out its task the study production of our fellow citizens in a dif- - person critically hurt No deaths had been quinine and abaca In other coun- of bombing the Penfoei airdrome ferent part of the country" reported at Koepang tries He said it is difficult to dethe scene said the at Reporters termine in wartime how far passenger train bound for Cape a free government should go in Va was struck by two Charles directing- the opinions and habits pushed by a locomotive of its people "But whether the coaches estabnot was It government should do more or lished whetherimmediately were pasthere less" he added "there remains sengers aboard these coaches All-Tim- e in this field a large and imwere being tvhich portant part to be performed by switched presumably 000 of the third quarter of 1912 PHILADELPHIA Feb 23 (!P) a free and responsible preyss" The first coach of the longer were The commission said the voltheir He declared that particular —Maybe they salting train jumped the track but did money income tax day ume of savings in the fourth care should be employed in disagainst were bulbs overturn not Light or maybe there just wasn't quarter was due largely to cussing problems bearing on shattered broken and glass anything Amerito but the substantial increases in cash the economic stabilization probuy sprayed the area can people saved more during and deposits in checkholdings gram In passengers standing $4- 1942 than ever before the secuaccounts ing amounting to dolReaffirming his intention to theMany to disembark aisles waiting a billion 600000000 and commission rities exchange nearly keep wages and prices inflexiwere thrown to the floor made known Tuesday lars higher than during the third ble as a safeguard against inThe commission disclosed in a flation he continued: quarter The public invested $3300- that individ"I realize that I will incur Cut Fat in Ice Cream quarterly analysis bonds 000000 in government ual savings for the year reached enmities That is important onNVASHINGTON Feb 23 (2P)— an record of $28 999- including $2300000000 in war ly because it will lessen my efBut I know I will Producers and retaiirs of ice 000000 fectiveness savings bonds during the fourth In addition savings of $10- fail in my task unless I have cream and ice cream mixes requarter an increase of half a ceived authority from the office 100000000 (hiring the fourth billion over the previous period the strong and enerTetic sun-pofl epavment of individual of an informed public of price administration Tuesday quarter of lat year exclusive debts other than mortgages Not for myself but to rcluce butter fat content as of purchases of durable goods opinion tell far below those in previous for our country I ask you to much as 212' per cent without retopped all previous quarterly ducing prices periods highs including the 9100000- help me get that support" -- 'Protect' i U S Kharkov Taken west-northwe- I es Smsh "icL4I T a fti(S rIll' 11 I I Byrnes Cautions U S Press On Criticizing 'Bureaucrats' into g flax soybeans sorghums dry beans and peas—may over-pla1943 wheat allotments and still be eligible for benefit payments and loans Wickard said that when 1943 announced the quotas wer United States had 1613000000 bushels of wheat more than enough to meet normal needs for two years Since that time consumption has increased and now promises to be the largest since 1920 when large quantities were sent to Europe to feed the hungry House Dummy Guns iBti lks Bill to Guard U S Iter Capital Roofs UNta for L) weekerseas T meigltamireinerygl: authorities) 4 t rfour temperature 1 of (Issued by permission - ' Isf- S-Whea- 1 ri ' in imum temperature Tuesday Lake City 42 de3g2reeds rnSaulmt 0 0 1 1 ilttiltptecrheadngeshinoAtieerrnsperateudrnec3:diaax i Salt Lake City Utah Wednesday Morning February 21 1913 146 No 133 Vol - k do - - For Salt Lake City and vicinity! t i t The Weather |