Show Temperatures The Weatlier Osdea UTAH— Cloudy " l Seventy-fift- h ' T ii Tear—No 195 tows Tb AM©dt4 ' " - OGDEN CITY UTAH FRIDAY EYENING m —- rr L— -- Blizzard GaiDtiir e British Akyab Isl and Off Burma Coast JANUARY 5 1945 4? Expansion ftuarrel Hinted a three-da- y attack Notwithstanding that both Presij dent Roosevelt and Gov Thomad E Dewey of New York advocated enlargement of security coverage! formidable opposition is beginning to show on capitol hill RepubJ Rep Knutson anq lican leader of the house ways con-j means committee which will sider expansion legislation saicu "However desirable it is not po-- j sible to extend social security cov-- i erage to all cfasses" Some law makers expect Mr Roosevelt to present security rec-- j ommendations in his annual mes- Administration! tomorrow sage sources indicated the recommend-- ! ations when fully outlined would co-or- di nated with smashing carrier raids on Formosa 'Radio Tokyo claimed that a V and two battle g aircraft-carrie- r ' in ships or cruisers were sunk as western Philippine waters op posing commanders intensified the air war swirling around invasion-threatenLuzon island and the advanced American base on Min-do- ro ' ' x - ' General Douglas" MacArthur indirectly confirmed Tokyo reports ef continuing ship movements toward Mindoro Jap broadcasters said another transport convoy had arrived Formosa Raid's Continue veriAdmiral Chester W Nimitz " the' carrier fied Jap reports that attack on ' Formosa enemy air toop and fleet assembly grounds north of tha Philippines carried into its third day On Formosa and Okinawa larg- tst of the Kyukyu islands con tinued lack of details indicated the attack was still under way "X - Admiral Lord Louis Mountbat-- j ten announced that seaborne In- dian ' and English troops swarmed ashore on Akyab island off south west Burma early 'Wednesday— aimultaneously with the opening of the attack on Formosa The Jap garrison had pulled out the night before leaving behind booby traps tnd land mines Invasion troops landed from i t! Warsaw in Ruins self-employe- d! 2 Incorporation of 'unemployment' insurance now administered by the states in a unified national! system of social insurance 3 Comprehensive measures to distribute medical costs and assure access to services of hospitals physicians and laboratories to alLwho have need of them— in such way as'to preserve free choice of doctor or hospital and personal relationships between physicians and their 1 patients ffegro Dies for Pullman Slaying (Continued on Page Two) ' (Column WASHINGTON Jan 5 (AP)— President Roosevelt will take to the air tomorrow nght to summarize to the nation his state of the union message to be delivered to congress earlier? in the day — V include: 1 Extension of old age and survivors' insurance to agricultural! workers domestic workers in pri-- s vate homes employes of the organizations and to federal state and local gov-- i ernment Workers not now covI ered -- 4 Roosevelt Will Broadcast Message Tomorrow -- non-profi- Five) S Heavies 1 Paste German Supply Arteries LONDON 150-mi- le - i Writer Declares full-sca- j i By Henry Shapiro linited Press Staff LUBLIN Poland Jan l 5 tUP) Warsaw is a citv of desolate ruins Stretching mile upon mile in every direction but in Its eastern dis tricts are poised several mighty Soviet and Polish armies ready to strike across the frozen Vistula in what may be the decisive winter offensive of the eastern front I have just returned from War saw where I saw those armies and the rubble of what once was one of the greatest capitals in Europte n- J m - - eight-thirt- eight-thirt- "t - " ry 15-sto- ry lew Trial Asked t' " i - I i ' STightens Ill-Fat- ed Train Collision ill-fat- ed Deaths Hit -- i No Feudiri' or Douglas Luce Pretty SolonS) Sign a Truce i - i I v (D-Con- n) : en -- In Chaplin Case LOS ANGELES Jan 5 (AP)— Joan Barry's lawyers planned to file a motion today for an early new trial of her suit contending that Charlie Chaplin is the father of her daughter The jurors deliberated five hours and 20 minutes The foreman Ferdinand J Gayj Beverly Hills property manager announced he believed it impossible to reach a verdict and Superior Judge Henry M Willis dismissed the seven women and five men jurors and declared a mistrial Gay told newsmen that six women and one man had favored a verdict finding Chaplin was not r and four men and a woman wanted to declare he was Six ballots taken duringi the two days deliberations all showed the same result "I have just begun in iritrM said Joan's attorney Joseph Scott when a deadlocked was dismissed yesterday! Itjury stood at 7 to 5 in favor of a verdict finding that the film man did not beget Joan's funny baby Carol Ann A H Risse: associate of Rrntt said they would argue for an early trial on grounds that the issues having once been tried nn lft hanging should have priority over oiner cases awaiting trial Chaplin had no comment He was confined to his home by a bad cut on nis anKie incurred Saturday night when he forcot his kevs and kicked in a glass door panel to "enter his house Miss Barry surprised said "Oh oh I'm sorry" the-fathe- he's-hopin- O) ' i ' Bob Hope Signs New Contract 10-Ye- ar CHICAGO Jan 5 (AP) — Bob Hope one of radio's top comedians has signed a new contract with his first and tmly sponsor Charles Luckman president of the Pepsodent 'division of Lever Bros announced today - the new Co contract will extend the partnerhis sponsor to ship of Hope arid 17 years The radio-movi- e star's first radio program was in lana Luckman said that since 1941 Hope and his troupe have Raveled approximately one million miles to entertain service men 10-ye- ar " Jan 5 (UP) allied political reaffirmed its Polish at London in the face of official notice that Soviet Russia has recognized as the provisional Polish government the committee that was set up at Lublin! under Russian Aegis LONDON Jan S (AP)— Russia in a major policy split with other big powersj today recognized the Polish provisional government of Lublin making a clean break with in the Polish government-in-exil- e London1 which still is recognized by the United States and Britain Bringing to a head one of the thorniest questions facing the im the pending! big three parley announcement came broadcast within four days of the joint announcement by the United States and Britain that they stood by the govern-ment-in-ex- ile London Polish government Leaders of the Polish peasant party in London had sensed a possibility that Moscow would "announce recognition of the Lublin government before the Roosevelt-- ' Churchill - Stalin meeting They charged that if Russia acted before that meeting it would be an attempt to present the other two powers With a "fait accompli" Russia broke relations with the London Polish government April 26 1943 in a dispute over the re discovery of graves of thouported sands of Polish officers in' the Smolensk forest Russia accused' the Germans of executing the : Poles but the London Polish government requested that the International Red Crqss make an ' investigation Moscow's recognition of the Lublin group made no reference to the rival London government - Wa' Costing U S 30 '' 40 23 48 18 34 21 23 FINAL EDITION Year-en- d the'i war-effa- rt : He's in Command 71 - - Haguen&u: road Germans Croc Rhine j I r ! ' pi'-- - i j i er miles Command -- j - - i ll There Wasn't Any Fire But Someone's Burning offensive disrupted communications between them and Lieutenant General George S Patton'a Third army south of the bulge News of the shift in command followed recent reports that Mont gomery would be made deputy supreme commander! under Eisenhower with jurisdiction over all ground forces on the western PORT CHESTER N Y Jan 5 (UP) — A commuter on the verge of missing his train telephoned Port Chester 700 gave his address directed! the man at the other end to hurry and settled back' to wait for what he thought was a taxi-ca- b front j t 'i There was no Immediate mdica Port Chester 700 is the fire de- tion whether the shift was perpartment No charges were made (Continued on! Page Two) but the man missed the train (Column Flv) ' Troops Penetrate Nazi Lines in Daivn Attack Ghost-Lik- e I By Richard D McMillan United Press WITII ALLIED TROOPS SMASHING INTO GERMAN SALIENT Jan 4 (Delayed) (UP)— I watclied white-cla- d troops rise up suddenly from the snow-covered countryside this moraine stand momentarily like snowmen silhouetted against the dawn then push forward in a surprise attack to slice' off the nose of this Ger man salient The- - ghost-lik- e white figures moved forward through' trees glistening like party tinsel in the half-ligThen they became lost among tanks guns and moire men moved secretly by allied high command through the valleys to launch the dawn attack ' The attack must have taken 's Field Marshal Karl Von battered shivering legions v ice-cover- ed ht snow-cover- ed Rund-stedt- by' surprise for it was1 not a day for battles It was icy coiq "You have to get j'our fingers unfrozen before you can pull the trigger" infantrymen saidfirst yesAmerican troops hitj terday morning from the northern flank of the salient and penetrated up to 4000 yards "This was really excellent' a British liaison officer told me "when you consider this is a battle where you need skis and sleds father than tanks and armored vehicles" The fiercest f ight raged at a strategic point the men have named Chapel Hill at the southern end of a front where the attacks were launched The hill got its name when a patrol went out before the attack found six Germans asleep in a monastery on the hill ana brought flrtt nrisnnrrs taken in this new battle for the bulge 25-mi- le "T ' '0 ' ' ' year-en- d - y v Monty Takes Jan '5 (UP)— treasury figures reveal nation has hit a sustained spending rate of approx- i ' German patrols crossed the Rhine north of r Strasbourg In undetermined strength possibly with the intention jof clamping on a pincers i that would squeeze out the allied salient pointing toward Karlsrhue Lt Gen Omar Ni Bradley American of the Commander Twelfth army group was disclosed in charge of all allied forces on the ' south side of the bulge Lt Gen George S Patton's Third is a chief element of this army command A V(A Washington J an' nouncement said one Seventh Com CHOSEN BY "IKE" army was included under Bradley's mand of one American army and - command) Bradley's command formost of another on the western merly included the First and front has been turned over to1 Ninth armies 1 Field Marshal Sir Bernard L Continues Montgomery in what President British Drive L Roosevelt described today as British Second army tanks and' Made infantry regular field operationD Fisen-howwent into action yesterday by General Dwight at the northwestern tip of the Von the change gave Montand reached salient Rundstedt gomery command of all forces Waha in! a push of 1500 yards including "British and ' Canadian The drive Is continuing field armies on the north flank of dispatches said and netted up to : the German salient Bradley 2000 yards all along its front from commands the forces on the Marche to the Tight flank of the south U Si First-armto the east This was a front of about seven PARIS Jan 5r (UP) —Marshal imately $270000000 a day These Sir Bernard L Montgomery comfigures coincided with announcement of British the of mander Twenty first by Secretary Treasury Henry Morgenthau Jr army group has been given overthat virtually complete sixth war all command of the American First loan drive figures showed the quota had been over- and Ninth armies and is directing subscribed by $7621000000— for a the assault against the Ardennes total of $21621000000 bulge from the north and west it Treasury tax revenue has been can be revealed today averaging over a six months' peThe cocky little field marshal riod ' approximately $11200000 a his reputation in the who day Comparison of that income Libyan-won campaign has been here with the daily outgo indicates the enormous treasury deficit this1 fis- there and everywhere on the Amer ican front personally giving in cal year will produce to American command structionshas been stepped up Spending ers seeking to halt the German in this fiscal year beyond the rate achieved in the last fiscal period onslaught He is well received by American but thes increase is comparatively small That indicates that we are GI's and officers whose attitude near the peak of our economic ef- was: "It makes j no difference fort It is expected that President whether the commander is' Amer ican or British so long as we can Roosevelt's budget to be to congress next Tuesday presented will not stop this thing" General Dwight D Eisenhower propose! a higher rate of expenditure than that now prevailing It supreme commander shifted the command of the two is more likely that we will budget over-afor somewhat decreased expendi- armies irom lieutenant uenerai ture in jthe next (1946) fiscal year Omar TI Bradley' commander oft the American Twelfth army group to Montgomery after the German ! While trie : British gained on the north today "however the German attack into northeastern France against the U S Seventh army developed into a full offensive with a drive forward for two more rnjles southeast of Bitcne— close to 15 miles inside France and within 12 miles' bit the Saverne gap the key to Strasbourg This latest' southward surge of the Germans carried Jhrough part of the old Magmot line and within two' miles ofr the Sarreguemines- L ' WASHINGTON that PARIS Jan 5 (AP)—Vet' British infantry and armor thrown into the Belgian bulge counter-atac- k by Field Marshal Sir Bernard L Montgomery commanding all allied-force- s on the north side of the salient has gained lip to" ' 2000 yards all along its front y OJfP Day - - 15-Sto- le P-5- ) nine-thirtee- 1000 - - WASHINGTON U S in an open cleavage today recognition of the Jan 5 (AP)— A score of top priority targets behind a The chief executive telling his stretch of the German news conference today that the lines between Cologne arid Karlsruhe were attacked today by more message will deal with - foreign than 1000- U S Eighth air force policy and manpower araori oth- heavy bombers in one phase of assault er things said it will be dbout a Five hundred 1 I 8000 words long fighters escorted the bombers American put His foreign policy discussion he after a day of inactivity yes- again indicated may touch oh thi sub- terday ject of more materials fot the Even before these forces returned French heavy bombers of the R A F The broadcast hour has net yet streaked toward the battle area been set but a White House secHeadquarters of the u S stra retary said sometime between tegic air forces said American targets were in a broad' area ex— tending from Cologne to Karlsruhe Jan 5 -NEWi YOKK Radio networks announced toiay and east beyond Frankfurt and that President Roosevelt would' "all of them are important points broadcast a summary of his an along the enemy supply routes to nual message to congress f torn me front" Holland-base- d y Mitchells and Bos p m M eight to tons of Field Marshal Sir Bernard W T tomorrow u Montgomery's air force — the R m r oecona tactical —raided a seven-thirt- y y m and p( would be pre- Concentration of German material mountain war time near St Vith f erred Huge formations of U S Eighth In connection with his foreign air iorce a lying t ortresses and tnrfflv tho rrpsnoiirv HJ:rncinn ident said in reply to questions jLiberators jabbed at rail and road 5 mics ciouas- wnicn that a new program lor feeding upne uuMurea has been targets and agreed upon Italy The tremendous davlieht activ that more food is going in there ity by bomber fleets followed two r He could not estimate the increase in pounds but said there night raids on Berlin and a sur were mare calories in the new pnae mow on nazi troops en trenched along the Bay of Biscay shipments He 'said shipping still is a very between Bordeaux and LaRochelle great problem in feeding thf Ital Dy K A 1 heavies Soldiers 'under the Soviet and Po SALEM Ore Jan 5 (UP)- - lish banners were massed in Fraga With a cheerful cry of "So long on the east bank of the Vistula and at much an integral part of War everybody" Robert E Lee Folkei saw as Brooklyn Is of New York convicted Negro mur City '' After an absence of a year from derer of the pretty bride of a na From the east side of the Vistula the United States Col Fiank val officer died in the state lethal ust below one of Warsaw's four ridzes and onlv 300 yards from a m Browning has returned having had gas chamber at he German lines I looked across a most unusual experience over today ea Much of his time was soen' The convicted murderer of Mrs he wreckage left by Germans in rlae Persian Gulf 'area getting Martha Virginia James of Norfolk then Soviet bombs and shells since : ians military supplies up to the Bus Vat in -- the "lower 13" Pullman that fateful Sept 1 1939 car murder protested his innocence ian front Told that some people believe v Skeleton He' stys Hha railroad men off to the last the Italian armistice terms should the umn Pacific and Southern Fclkes walked quickly and un- tThe naked frame of a be made public on the ground that dominated the skyline like military considerations are no Pacific nade a big contribution aided to the gas chamber and re to the cause and many of them fused a blindfold until seated lie a macabre skeleton For miles be longer a factor for continued se were from Ogden had told reporters when maintai4-in- g hind the long lines of German crecy the president said military trenches pillboxes and artillery people on the spot sua consider The natives had high regard for his innocence that the there was no sign this factor important those railroad men who were cap- captain of the Los Angeles police homi emplacements Even powerful of any living thing able of performing what the Pers cide squaa had said: ""Someone Some people in this country he ians regarded as miracles of trans has to Day for this crime and its binoculars failed to reveal signs of added seem to know more than easier to convict a Negro than a life do portation and construction But invisible Germans were en thev aiscussion ot A man" whe comprehensive trenched underground and behind A railroad was built in the desert affairs is in Just before the doors to the the anticipated vestiges of tenements broke the foreign under1 120 degrees of temperature death chamber closed message the FoIkeS monotony president's of the winter day with and trains were operated carrying smiled nodded and shook hands It is not expected nowever mat bullets and artillery shells which he will attempt to define exactly millions of tons of war material with the chaplain A blindfold screamed overhead was put over his eyes and at nine States United policy toward cur As we stood on the edge of no rent Headquarters was established at seven the gas struck his face He man's-lanpolitical problems European — - more properly d juaras well upthe Persian Gulf gasped jerked back and breathed The chief executive is representcon Col Prosk the and from there the railrnnrt to keep his hands deeply and heavily for several mint said that this wa$ ed as wishing tended 900 miles across Iran to utes He was pronounced dead 6 ducting officer bargaining with Trime a quiet day — the same quiet day free for Churchill and Premier me Caspian sea minutes later Minister that German shells killed otf Stalin in the forthcoming Much of this rail rnarl lvat frn- Big 70 more civilians than in wounded etructed by German engineers prior conference Three Praga to the war pursuing a well planned U Control Revolt military objective aiming at the Ultimate conquest' of India The mayor of Warsaw pointed Over Sawmill Output to what used to be the central seen Had the German campaign WASHINGTON Jan 5 (AP)-- 4 ion of the capital He said it was 8gainst Russia worked out accord- uescriDing me-- lumber situation a$ he focal point in-of the j ing to German strategy the road "critical" the war production board surrection" in August its through Persia would have been today tightened controls oveif 50 Not a soul remained linked up with a line down from sawmills Henceforth the mills there to tell single he said "Of tale" the Stalingrad to the shores of the will be permitted to ship lumber a population of more than 700000j Caspian sea viuy on ceriuiea oraers or on spe only a handful of survivors man- The number of lives claimed In WPB authority Onlv It required 58 days V for Col cific now! cross and to Vistula the aged an express train Browning to reach Baras by boat tions to the order announced last are in Praga Every one of thei the collision of He came home in three days by night aije mills which produce less others either was killed or taken and the Southern Pacifie limited to Germany" west of - Ogden Sunday morning plane crossing Arabia North Af- man imuuu Doara Xeet a year rica and the Atlantic oday reached 50 with the deatn of Mrs Ann Butti 31 of Loraine This southern part of Persia is Ohio an interesting region There- - the Mrs Butti died today at eignt- Garden of Eden was established twenty a m at a hospital jmu according to the natives who will Nev show you where the apple-tree- s The victim was en rdute to uan- of the long ago grew unrt rant tn visit her sailor hus- when Enlalie McDowell house of congress — Mrs band the railroad announced Thousands of small bands of By was She occurred Wood-hous- e the accident United Mrs Press Chase Staff Going uougias sheep come down to the desert undamaged the Elko to in taken and Mrs Emily to pasture on the green spots in WAamnu'KJN Jan 5 (UP)-- J Taft Douglas (D-Il- l) section of the leading train in Other the "winter time and then hurry in the collision volved were present but the back in spring to their mountain Anyone looking for a fight in the? an inquest into Meanwhile new audience was in congress may be wasting his tops hundreds of miles distant mostly interested Af thA rniUsion has been pmsA the feud that was supposed to time if for a direct exist from January 9 t0an" The shepherds are nomads con- clash between the two between the Mesdames Luce postponed xv 16 uary according to Aiirea and Douglas stantly moving down and back representatives—Reps Clareprettiest microBoothe coronor because Many of them are Kurds and their Luce and Helen Gahagan Douglas (R--With only Rep Frances Bolton Gladwell tests of an autopsy perscopic women folk make kurd in goat two the them Because Mrs Luce the Repubseparating formed James McDonald enupon ekins They offer the product to lican from Connecticut and Mrs publicized rivals sat through a gineer of the express will not be the Americans who dare not eat Douglas the Democrat from Cali- couple of speeches — without an completed for 10 days of the kurd fearing dysentery for fornia seem to have buried the exchange of words Petterson superintendent much of the material is polluted hatchet— if indeed a hatchet ever i Then Mrs Douglas rose for her of VtheM Salt Lake division South-a speech existed ern will conduct Pacific railroad ''1 have resented—" she began Near Baras is the center of the More than a hundred Washingat nine oint hearing Saturday and turned date industry 16O000 tons being ton newspaperwomen looked on toward Mrs i m in which the railroad rep sharply in Luce The audience of newspa- resentatives the interstate comsurprise last night when the two perwomen and even Mrs merce commission and the Utah Sanitary regulations lady legislators shook hands Luce lookedgasped startled by the exporters otherwise the smiled sweetly at ' each other and to "I have resented the position public service commission will parfruit would not be marketable bring a highly unscheduled climax they have jockeyed us into" Mrs ticipate the Only about 4 ' per cent of rnsuj Women's givei? £y Douglas continued tThe natives are Immune'' to the National h club derailed mail cars "in the wrecked Then like a flash her ham (Continued on Page Two) rain damaged H C Denton out and Mrs Luce jumped up to and Rwas of the three new W women Macy postal inspectors in the grasp it V- : disclosed : k f Sn7lV i I sub-zer- (R-Min- n) ed s tlGIIT-lNC- n A blizzard that left eight Inches of snow in one day almost buried this SNOWFALL car left parked on Buffalo N Y street A state emergency was declared for the second time in three o weeks as heavy snows and temperatures threatened transportation and production facilities in many eastern cities j 25 YeUwstno 49 English Rush to Save Liece as ' Von Rundstedt Attacks Allies Battle Nazis Amid Snow Of Lublin Poles Ai " 22Pocatello 16 PAGES — 2 SECTIONS Russ Recognize Government By Associated Press British troops have' seized the Burmese port of Akyab in their first amphibious WASHINGTON Jan 5 (AP)— on road the long operation A major congressional quarrel oacK to oineapore wniie shaped up today "around adminisf an expansion o Philippines - based American tration plans for social security which would blank j aircraft and PT boats et additional millions of persom knocked out 69 Jap ships in under the benefits program 43 35 28 W 30 27 24 - Social Security Formosa Hit Again 2 B ritisli- Gain ini Belgiiim0 Nsizis Advance on Yanks Line hr otagli Old Magindt is Yanks Knock Out 69 Jap Ships KE A Serrlee AP fterrtoe —— "Wy' !:M5"JWwwwjT"f" -- -- r rRno 3 JJ5 ' : Sub-Zer- o 32 4 49 42 24 Portland i — — Temperatures Grip East j- MaxMin i Omaha 3° Rock Springs 3 39 31 'Salt Lake 43 18 10 San Antonio 6S Chicago ' 48 ?I 28Sn Fran Gd Junctton 43 16 St Loula 30 Las Vegaa 64 26 Seattle 52 Los Angeles 73 52 Sheridan 33 -- 18 Minneapolis 35 Washington New Orleans 63 44'Phoenix! 10 New York Okla City i 26 56 30 Provo Bismarck Butt portion this Afternoon and tonight Saturday partly cloudy Somewhat eofdei today ' 4 A?2tVrU with occasional light rain or snow north and west " ?iMir- - Concentrated Assault The concentrated assault stirred up nazi traffic movements which correspondents at the front interpreted v as xa possibly Withdrawal from the tip of the German salient Reports said however that this might be only a regrouping around Hauffalize in the center of the salient- - where fight to prevent Montgomery's and Bradley's forces from Joining Other British units attacked th Germans on the outskirts of newly captured Bure and at WavfevilleA south of Rochefort on the nos of W the German penetration The British had been rushed in the scene at the first indication of to Liege when Marshal danger Von Rundstedt broke through but they had been used chiefly in backstopping the Americans until they went into their own attack yesterday In Severe Wintej Six opposing armies— three al lied) and three German— plus ele ments of the Ninth army were thus committed to grinding battle in the forbidding Ardennes in the midst of severe winter The U S First army to the east meanwhile knifed through drifting foe which reduced visi zero and scored almost to bility several gains of 1000 yards at different places along a 17mile front they-Woul- d -- a force A German counter-attackin- g out at was wiped Bergeval'on the left flank near Stavelot It was hard going however and a staff officer at Montgomery's hparirtiiarters declared f'This is the hardest ground we over V Canadians Gain in Italy ' j " ROME Jan 5 ( AP) —Canadian advanced against troops y have counter-attacks along strong enemy to withAlfonsine the road east of of San in a mile and one-ha- lf Alberto eight miles north of Ravenna in the Adriatic coastal sector of the Italian front allied headquarters announced today Russ Mass Forces' LONDON Jan 5 (AP)— The Berlin radio reported today that the red army was massing troops in the Vistula bridgehead area 120 miles south of Warsaw and was again proving nazi lines along the Polish front Russian forces were reported by Moscow to be grimly holding off German armored attacks supported of ptenes today in by hundreds soviet-held corridor once 30 the miles deep ndrthwest of be' leaguered Budapest The German panzer thrust down the Danube west of the big Dan- ube bend entered it f third dayto It appeared daringly: designed liberate remnants of nine nazi divisions trapped in the Hungarian capital Inside Budapest Russian storm forces ' for the eight day gained more ground and now have citv blocks since the initial attack last Friday a soviet communique said occu-niiHi4- nf : |