Show t ) - H 0 ' ) Editor's not' t f I 1 : : ' ° Pi 11) ti e 1 i : - ii ! - 1 tale g' LKti ala ' le ''' Sudsy March Ite Tribune 3 ' i 4 - if) o ) ''w TT s or 11 p 't '"It'A''1 '"""''''"""":7 7""""7":"""'"'"""""rem-'"'"'""' V- - 11 Nye' A ttk t ri at 'd t ossis-4- ' ' 'T i '1 ter ' tat r mem et) eir"Al0 )00 i ies eiteimite - t fir tee- Ith- - as t ' tome-- eqt te I A ' i s t thee 'e ' - ' t - tliorte Is t' I aiet ta ee ' te ea i'd '' 0 ' ' 'T'e ) ''''" "eteete tx Nor I'"oydo' neon t eerie tiarit7e 5p1 t - mem te tett et ereinweemestatet ttaatit este Some gilded Alive than one buried alive More - '' Zeit eisa ' ' 14" ' 'eti ei 1:---- - ''''''''ili"L'IiI i eide t tide 'hemti ' -) ea lei - re I :ill ti-- i ) tftetY e -- t ' ' te- iise et es e a at ' 4 ti 14- "tee le "et - ' esed et et ett1 feed - e- tde i - stee-- 1 sy S ' me ‘t I) ' ' s a -t- 'ii i e miste"' isstii t i' - anorr i ei J ' i ' ' ' ' '' a- - ' :- -at '' 4 - ' —Associated Press Wireollo los ea ' ' - ' ' but without 1 ' - ' life by bayonet club sword pattern fighting against you" said the Japanese interpreter But this was only the begin fling Most of the killing and dying was done on the road out The Japanese plan had been to force the enemy out of ' Bataan to the town of Ulan- - ' Or pistoL 1 a Japanese Around Mativeles officer raised his heavy sword and brought it crashing down Up near Bagac on a trail over the mountains to the east coast nearly 400 Men of the 19th Philippine Army Division were marched into the woods' tied together and beheaded the shoulder of an American captahe splitting his trtmk to the navel Olt Anyone caught with Japanese money was assumed to have taken it from a Japanese he had killed More than one 1 coin collector paid with his maenrewstail1 ' with Etre& ' - ' pvthon and Iguana "Iguana is fair monkeY I wrote do not recommend" Col Richard C Malloriee Qine Mapped - For Revenge ' "We are doing this because many of our soldiers died ' stations - laq at te ' tel said he e servante-Sh- - - To - - later thbee 'Tic ha 1 I They remember' but their notv and children hardly believe Could it really have happened that 4 way? n t It did wives - grown - ' ' - - '' - t a 10(1 "a" '4401t ' ' eating good fun good health Meadow Gold Cottage Cheese is fresh as springtime It's full of delicious flavor and full of healthful protein Serving ''- Ideas:Top oft a tossed salad with ' 0 we - ' - t - ' 0 IS - MAIMS 90001 - - 1 ' -- d- e t "see OtkitiVald- OS- ' te I e I14ti : '' m ? ' (me ' i i" f 38 tr ‘ t T1 t11 h tro e z iii 4 - - ir ' bi - til tO - i XC '1 : :rf ‘Nt In i:Lt a It et hi v cc A ' '' Pei t In A e e cy 0a le IC 4A1-?)!:!- ! -- t' ii 't 1t t is etesomate tt it ea I 4's et ' 1 K 4) ' 11111 li 1 ' P' C a - il i It ' 1 wee to log il talit! a - N--I ti ti ' li - e II in e to ( ' r t 1 ''' Pt 16 It )0J) ' rAp 41' W 'f7'0 - 0 ' - n ' $341144 ' I i I t - : 1 it 4 'etteasse' 1 '' e ' IP I 1 d e ' y ?(4" 4 0 at 4i' 4$ - - : II 'set I teetahmeat Isi dt - t 9 "t et le ' ' - e I Meadow Go e i CO y ' - (1 0 tay"''11 I"- 1 4:7s41A In '' t C) - rd4 A' a - it:F:ykmgzar7r eads e tee - el et Easy Torms ea b ek se 4 it es e 7:113 ' a Ila 't ---- ' ' ty 4 it ' tdeut t ' Ade s' - I fruit salads and fruit plates Sparkle up all kinds of menus Meadow Gold creamy Cottage Cheesi a so much to onjoy' I etti a u Meadow Gold Cottage Cheese Add it to I st( tee ro t Rodsoeur Hoaring Aids i ' ) GOOd ttr 111 - ' lig 0 ' te wt 1' t I 1 ese mii Ir dialtelde s 'Pt) to - i 201 Judge Bldg 3rd Sat& Main 35541132 Solt tole City Utah $4111 ' is t i mi tal its i service 2345ternbliYo:uturmuclttial ' I to or elelse - : s ' ttin PE Messy now fonteresExclusivonOnthe4florl Discount to ponsioners Fry liforo You Soy 4 t 11 t - ' se la! ce to pr e eteettem ' ' di 0' tde - ' ' I Werilm141666' ' tic ed ' meteetze k - ba Squad Morro hot ond speech ottieratentainn hatao4 Sinew I eetesomfol hearing smell powerful easy I lii et se sent Gen Homma to a firing squad Instead lie was executed at Los Banos on April 3 1946 four years to the day that he had opened his Good Friday Offensive Twenty-fiv- e years is a long time Most of the rancor is gone the memories softened by time Now the survivors set out by chartered plane to see the mountains and Jungles of Bataan where they suffered the little bands of National ta i GUArdtilMOR from places lige Ill' Albuquerque e Maywood letele Janesville Wis and i 4' Salinas Calif t that 26 P"1117m$4u1'td16'trch ems w it Whitest WILL on YOU ttOST firing ' t°°' 'el( the military tribunal But 1 ' KWIC RADIO march to prison ' The first leg was to be eight miles to ()rani then 15 miles - a - e " i e'a' ac ' et ' th 1 Suave P L LaINEAR ii - i t th - ' - ce - s ' for prevention of malaria was "topped at the end of February by Ateil 1 the hospitals had a week's aupply only for those near Sixty-fiv- e miles Ls not tt long death Arid the hospitabo and' had 24000 e march for a soldier' hs good aid padents Diarrhea and dysen condition- These - men were t tory were common beriberi not and malaria were spreading ' The began inunedl Quinine 39 loved Galsworthy and Shaw and even on Bataan had never gone to bed without reading a chapter of "Gone With the Wind" He had hoped to see the movie as soon as the Jap-anese ''land in California" But there also was MSgt t et ' tering The first survivors began te walk out of Bataan on the morning of April 9 These were the men on the east coast nearest tamso Whe got the word first Tor those en the WeSt Ct1"St Ind arowid Mariewles it was as much al tour daYs before Mt fighdnt stopped and they could start down the road None knew where thew were 'ming but it was to Camp O'Donnell 65 miles to tbe north tong march and the ' - were eaten lime more than a Thousand of them then all 250 horses and !Ina)? even the 48 mules of the 26th Cavalry Regiment After that came dog and monkey meat even ra m Now he sat cool and suave while his wife testified that he was always "kind and consid- crate" to her the children : : TAir4-e- a 1 ograganThizeedreintthoeygrouwepreg estimated King - fotor - escaped The Filipinos had the best chance melting into the crowds in the towns and strike Mg out for the hills But many Americans made it too join ing the growing guerrilla forces that harried the Japanese until the end of the war Nobody knows bow many died on the death march Gen ' - ''Ll 'tin i Nation Unprepared ''' The nation was not totally James Baldasarre 28 years In Stories of unprepared Japan the at captured Army nese brutality had been seep- 'Bataan survivor of the death ing back from the war fronts march a prison ship and a for months But this sworn Manchurian POW camp He statement based on the testi- - I jooked straight at Gen mony of three American offiHonuna and testified "I saw cers who had escaped from Japanese officers riding along Philippine prison camps was the route There is one in this the first official American place right now that I recogconfirenation of horrors enly nize who was riding in an offii feared The nation was dal car Le Gem Homma" t aroused as at few timei in its Outside of court Baldasarre t' ' ' ' now bald and toothless said history Sen Bennett Champ Clark "They should hang the man of Missouri: 'Bomb Japan ' He is a d son of a bitch Out of existence" Sent RichI should pull the rope They ard B Bussell: "They are killed people like flies Send brutish - beings in human him to me 1'11 fix him nix" - rpmr--1bele- - " t Ma-yea- rs sat cad s Fortune's 'wheel comes full circle In top photo CoL Zlehoo Nakayama representing Gem iilasahara Ilomma piles humiliation on defeat by refusing to accfpt M4 Gen Edward Iiing's surrender April 9 s 1912 On Feb 11 1948 bottom Gen dcath sentence from military tribunal for crbnes ately 4 ' ' ' '1' ' 14 a i f ''' 11- ' - " ut - " '1 m President Manuel eteawn kti tele Chaos Ind other Phiermine officials All Bataan was chaos The bad left Corregidor by subma- rine and Gen Douglas Mao '14th Army was driving hard for the heights of Mariveles Arthur departed on Match le "I shall return" he had anxious to site its artillery said but the prospects looked The mass of Americans and dim And now Gen Homma's Filipinos no longer an organized force were trying to get 14th Imperial Army held Ma nila and the entire rim of Ma- - out of the peninsula Nearly 200000 people were now in the nila y one of the finest harbors in the Orient This tiny triangle of Lower Bataan an advancing army a had been MaeArthurls strate- defeated army and thousands to hold Bataan gv ' ' civilians of gidor until the last Gem Emma had one °Wee-bj "He might have the bottle 'live to get close to Corregidor 1 had the cork" True but Gen Homma was and smash it as soon as possi hie To be sure he had a plan tinder orders to pull the cork and quickly His final drive for his captives but it quickly went awry rn the first place began on Good Friday April 3 that year with 80000 soldiers he had not expected Bataan to fall until the end of April In By the night of the 8th he line below the second place his bag of had reached size Bagac on the west coast end prisoners was twice the Orion on the east Only 11 he estimated :He had barely enough food relies left to Mariveles and then his artillery could blast medicine and transport for his Corregidor two miles lams Own army for the prisoners be had virthally none It can tilt water be said too that he hsa no In the Triangle idea his enemy was so nearly e In the triangle left played out 12000 were to Gen King Wiusted Axes Cleared American officers and enlist He was not prepareit for the ed men mostly Army some thousands of sick in the hospe 66000 Philippine Army men civilians ern- - tals for the other thousands 61000 Filipino ployel of the army and about hardly able to walk and for who had no 20000 refugees many of them the thousands women and children who had food and expected him to feed slipped behind the lines seek- - them AS a general of war from the !nye& Homma warded the peninsula s: protection cleared of the enemy It was : er-and liomma took cart not to The flies and mosquitoett ' were terrible' From early inquire how it war done done It was for the meet February food rations had from half part with great disorganize-ration- s dropped steadily to one third then to tion oteleitte and wanton kill whatever the country provid- - ing For most of the Americans and Filipinos tt was ed done by foot with great suf The carabao (water buffalo) i perfectly He had been a military Mu: dent in England in 1918 served as a British observer In France In the 1930e 'he had been military attache in London and decorated with the Military Cross of the Brit- ' - —ish Empire e: -' 4 -- i 1 m te meet prisom ' tta ') eeett'4 our-the- ' " iest e t :re '' ' 1 t ' i dance ball iin MIL Six feet tall every inch a soldier be sat straight in his chair He understood English bombed-ou- r i - 1 Al'i 0 d 1 ' ge (A 1 eteweet$ e ' i - the dirt The way stops were sheer horror You could tell the approach by the smell of rot-ling corpses' human excreof men ment Thousands dying of dysentery and diarrhea could no longer control themselves And always the stilts and the men without hats lost or stolen In the towns the men wee held overnight in sheds pens corrals or in the open crowded together in styes left by the preceding groups of pris 'i form" Sen Hill of Colorado: einem And elways the revolt"Cut the heart out of Japan ing stench with fire" Sen Carl A Nor wee there iny auto Hatch: "A throwback to barcease even at San Fernando i barlanisrn isolate Japan on ? the or Camp O'Donnell At its islands forever" rail town the men were i In England at almost the jammed into closed cattle! same time ' Foreign Secretary cars some wood some metal told a shocked Eden Anthony The doors were 'closed end thel Parliament of "unspeak- tales sun but damn For a mini- i to British able savagery" mum of tour hours they rode! in hands Japanese north to Capes Many died on 4 prisoners But why announce the trot the way and were too crowded cities now nearly two years to fall down until the door MacArthur later Z later? Gen ed were blamed it on a cabal of his enemies at home for dark Slightly Easier The last nine miles from purposes he only hinted at were ' The callous said it was toe Capas to O'Donnell of war bonds slightly easier only because spur the sale the men were out of the battle and the sales did bound by double and triple The govern- zone tod the weakest among rent said and in the long them had already expired Not ell men walked Most '' view of history it mast be ao officers and some fortunate i cepted that the delay was to enlisted men were taken by : protect those still in captivity Nearly 30000 Americans car or truck directly from ilalanga to O'Donnell Thou sands of others never made it atat for another reason they 'ewei 'wet' '' - ' c)st e I' ' - h ": ' 0-- were in Iapanese prisons at this time The United States had been trying desperately by political pressure by threat and by cajolery to ket food and medicine to them and to force the Japanese to eve their treatment impr When all efforts failed the story was told Gen Homma went on trial in 1946 in a January of death" With stuthnneinnglasurcde denness the Arrny and Navy made a joint announcement on the night of Jan 27 1944 It was that 5203 Americans from Bataan and Corregidor bad died after the death march The announcement said 2200 Americans had died at Camp O'Donnell in Axil and May 1942 and 8000 more at the camp at Cabenatuan through October 1942e boo wands The prisoners were stripped of all personal belongings ' even canteens If a man fell by the wayside he was left in the road to be squashed by trucks rushing to the front In some were cases the defeated forced to burytheir dead by the roadside det 41 te ad 'iai '' tga:i eta le ce 44-e- ") -- f t e ' ''''?''' - i 1 ' - ' - - t ea eeaeareen) i a' ' a 'ie': - it teitteetiP' t - a ite '1 ' ' --:- ' f ! es half-ratio- at twee but for the great was nothing less it majority ' than hal ' The Japanese plan ' had called for food at every way atop there was none The sun shone mercilessly every day and there was no water Men drank from the carabao wallows and were shot down or tiayoneted for breaking ranks They were forced to run when they could hardly wet Japanese soldiers in passing trucks beat them with bam- t' l ' a ' i sa - i -- ' inprisonetrirsesendlyouldspbetrettal few were a4 ' 4 edthe et a 104 Homma's order' said wen e (I I 0 1 ' i - ' 0-- 1 'MO Americans had reached O'Donnell by the end of May and that between 800 and 650 Americans died on the march For the Filipinos probably 10003 died on the match and another 63103 eecaped But even O'Donntoll was not the end In the first seven weeks there another 1600 Americans died and 10 times that many Filipinos Those who lived laced another 312 in prison camps from the southern Philippines all the way to Manchuria And for thousands of them perished in agony in the holds death was only delayed Many of unmarked prison ships sent to the bottom by Anted- can bombers But two years thleaSimplledblioefin: the United sbetatOtesre tubao and Gen ' ''''' 4 ':'4-- bP 011 t a d - 4iN) t!'i N s ei A s e ' see- '' - 1 CI - ' i I eiseteitstridtemett King ti Unfriendly Spirit e etweletmetemmesi cipct 4art t et ity wasetwi ea :qr 1 s ' " ' tmet ' ' A d ast f i s : - Ct - I e's ' 1 - ' a t ' 'Imi0144 esiatese- e- se ile sdhre$01' : ' "' : test et t 1 tv't ' - - ' ' ea e eat e g ' ' ' CI 1 ' t ' dawn on April 9 looking for Gen Helmut They ?levee found him mid the "surrere der" went wrong trom the 1 0 S ' in - e 4'' '''' - pie This Is what Gen King faced on the night of April ii Ilie orders were not to surrender but he refused to accept the alternative — slaughter with fun knowledge of Ilia or den and with full responsibil ty fetr his action he sent two of his men foresee before r -- 4 finally eight more miles to San Fernando a town on the main rail lint north front Manila From San Fernando capital of Paropanga Province they would go by rail to Capes a trip and then walk the final nine miles to Camp O'Donnell ' shirt p A 1 ? it ' Fought Way North Atlantan – COL Everett Ce Williams Jr a with 37- years in the United and teal Marshall Hurt Jr :States Army had looked upon fought their way north by the night of April 8 1942e as jeep over roads jarmned with ' an end not a beginning ee Japanese and Filipino soldiers That very night his quarter' and vehicles Finally they tnaster had told him there abandoned the jeep and n of was one more forward walked waving a t ' food and it would be distribut- - sheet until they were in the ed the next morning if posse presence of mai Gee Hanle Me With Lt Gen Masaharu fair° Nagano lie ettreed to 1 Itemmais final offensive in full meet Gen king near Lomao drive there was no assurance and sent Maj Hurt to get i that tomorrow would come i bee "We have no further means Gen King wearing his last ' of organized resistance" Gen clean uniform left his head- I told his officers Ring at 9 am but it was Crammed together hi the quartersnoon before he could Bataan Peninsula ' were more nearly'!tame° He and three of reach than 100000 people nearly his staff officers were ordered 1 civil-to 30000 of them Filipino sit at a table in front of a tans This was the last stand farm house A black Cadillac only Bataan and Corregidor drove up and out stepped Col ' ' Gen M otoo itwere left Nakayama Fortunes at Nadir Hommas operations officer ii ' Allied fortunes in the Pacif 'Get Wainwright' ' ' lc had reached their nadir Wain "You are Gen The American fleet had been w r i g ht?" he demanded erippled at Pearl Harbor the I interpreter through his :garrison at Wake Island bad When King said he was not i '4 capitulated "CO and t' Hong Kong had surrendered Nakayama shoutedHamm had Wainwright" get ' on Christmas bay Singapore sent Nakayama to take the the and fallen Japanese Iliad acmes ' surretider of ' tan s Corregi: hordes were sweeping Col ' the Netherlands East Indies dor and WPInwright his ten' 'toward Australia Japanese Naha:tette was sure eral would not take kindly ta 4:1:embers already 14 imevily i and ha lemaine anyielsig :bombed Darwin fullotts-th1 Coaregidor i On Batelle ' v i a Iccept 7 D'e 1 et women lonely! IT ' ' i ande: sitrr1 alike and in e Irilipino ' sword: et' with falling hatched the I No lett P et e the Where iwa ships 'hopes ' &mom-froa the ships with arms end food fse't n ' 7 last ' mighty America? They Oahe& C ttaltayama's word that every persolt was 'did not come and in time the y defenders came to know that on Bataan would have to would not come They render as an indMdual and that's the way it was i 7 felt alone bitter deserted Now began the march to '1 Shall return' Gen Edward e to Bad diet and bad water had caused welling and night blindness in thousands of peo No Tomorrow? ' ' I years age thousands of Americans and Filipinos made what history now roils the Bataan Death Marsh It boson Altrit F 114 end Its brutality end horror sot the sMilted world asolmt APS& ft thatterd Albertson Illusions of InelbsiblillY A lotorty catty' tater most smunds ors healod end hundrodo ii Anorkon survivors ME mturn Is Sateen to dedicate a memorial This is the story of iittellor thrmotth the tots skt Mewl be the author of "Iwo 4Ime" and Ono Fosifis war books Mal I I - - Twentytlye By Richard F Newcomb Associated Press Writer The general asked his staff officers to come to his tent at midnight and by 2 am his decision had been taken: he would surrender all forces under ' his command on ' ' Bataan" Thus began quite unexpeo tediy for both sides the infat mous march of death 1For the United States it was a national humiliation and yet a victory within detest For Japan a badge of shame before the civllized world - d '") 1 ti ' ' - r - - 1141 tenpagssrargyttO a |