Show Temperatures A The Weather XTTAH— Partly Butta cloudy this after- Chicago Denver Grand June Lai Vegac Los Anga'ea Minneanolia New Orleans New York Okla City ly warmer The United Press The Associated Press - Year— No 203 levenry-fift- h r "A U S Traditions First Delegate 2280 Nip Planes I ':( A'r-i- I - In WASHINGTON April 18 (UP) — President Truman's reports to congress and the armed services outlined a cautious pattern today for the crucial 1D0 first days of an administration he prom ised to conduct in "the Amer i Plans were being made as he broadcast last night for a meeting of the "Big Three" foreign ministers here preliminary to the San Francisco conference China and France may also be represent " ed In his broadcast to the millions of uniformed Americans the new president told of his shock at Franklin Delano Roosevelt's death 'He never faltered" he said nor shall we" Veteran of Battle Mr Truman spoke to the troops as a veteran who knows the mud muck and danger of battle "I have done as you do In the field whm a commander falls" he said "My duties and responsi- Diiiues are ciear i nave wauuitu them- - These duties will be carried on in keeping with the American tradition "I know the strain the mud the mlwrr the utter weariness of the anMier In the field And I know too his courage his stamina and his iann in nis comraaes ms country and himself "We are depending on every one of you" broadcast was The beamed from 32 short wave stations in this country It was staby army and navy tions Amplified transcriptions reached those "forward elements which couldn't get it otherwise Some 8000000 armed Americans overseas heard the report to the lervices ( ! : " - five-minu- te -- i i e Quotes Lincoln ! ( I ' The president ended with a para- graph from Lincoln's second address: toward none "With malice with charity - for all with firmness In the right as God gives us to see the right let us strive on to finish the work we are in: To bind up the nation's wounds to care for him who shall have borne the battle and for his widow and his orphan — to do all which may achieve and cherish a peace among ourjust and lasting all nations" with selves and Mr Truman demonstrated sound radio - technique on the air last delivered to news-- I night His textsome hours before paper offices short- delivery was a model of is the sentence composition That 'I ! Continued on Page Two) (Column Three FMNK FRANCIS' Tieenlv moved Prime Minister Churchill at memorial services in St Paul s cathedral Tuesday wept KTn nn an rfnnht that the nrime minister recognized in Franklin D Roosevelt the head of a nation who in Britain's darkest hour had gone to the aid of the empire and a personal friend for whom he had formed the warmest attachments The Dresident's death was a severe blow to Churchill When V-- E day arrives which be soon the army officers at of Ogden arsenal will be head Cmay disappointed if the men and 'women in that big institution do not hold firmly to their tasks of winningofthe war itaid them fins vesterday it would be betrayal of our cause if the workers were to fall away from their work and fail to carry on until Germany is cleaned up and Japan brought to her knees A hurrah given over to high jinks even for a day might slow up production to the point of impairing our fighting power in the south Pacific and thus prolong the war with its attending mounting casualties If we are to do our utmost in the winning of the war there is no itime now to be given to prolonged holidays accompanied by lowered efficiency—and devotion to a great the conserving of the fmrpose our boys on the fighting fronts When final victory comes then n buoyancy of our pride we can Yi good grace give unbounded I forces of to the pent-u- p souls jour Amazing Is our production of oil purposes and (principally for war equally amazing is the movement Of the product Last week the deliveries of oil to the Atlantic coast by tankers alone amounted to over 540000 barrels daily 'At the same time oil deliveries j ! " - oo Page jtCoEtlnue (Column Two) 48 62 59 Portland 28 44 Reno 36 54 Rock Springs 23 41 0 89 67 60 87 38 30 Salt Lake San Antonio 84 47 80 San Fran 44 69 St Louis 46 38 Seattle 21 80 Sheridan i sa 72 Washington ( 12 40 4763 IVeJlowstone RNAV EDITION stroyed by American and British carrier planes and gunners in the last month in support of the 1 anti-aircra- s Thrtt) A AT CONFERENCE Foreign Minister Guillermo Tortiello of head of Guatemala nation's delegation to the that San Francisco conference Is the first delegate to arrive in San Francisco ! Progress Noted in United Nations anti-aircra- Land-base- Conference Unity By Arthur Gaeth Correspondent SAN FRANCISCO April 18— Although the picture here on! the spot is confusing there are many signs that progress is being made in the organization of the United of Interna Nations Conference tional Organization This city is assuming a terrific Standard-Examin- This staggering toll' was an nounced by Adm Chester W Nimitz today amid Increasing indi cations that Japan's fierce air at tacks on the American invasion armada off Okinawa heavily drained the enemy's supply ' of nlane snrt nflnts The planes were KnocKea oui oi enemy air fleets attacKing me Americans on and off Okinawa onH also in TT S and British car rier raids on the Ryukyus and the Jap main islands Tanks Bag Greatest Number Pilot c from Vice Adnv Marc A Mitscher's fast carrier force shot th trrentest number— 1600 d aircraft escort guns and planes flying from Orn rn rriers accounted IOr DUU ish carrier planes covering the southern flank wiped out 80 rwtMictinn of the Jan air force thus averaged 76 planes a day from March 18 through Apru u lyes Thim toll Hoes not Include planes shot down by Superfortresses or by escorting Mustangs trom iwo Jima Jap planes hit the Okinawa area striking heavily again on Monday ana ten in 10 waves between nine thfrtw a m at least 10 of the at In suicitackers were demolished were shot dal attempts Sixty-tw- o down in combat and 38 xeU to anti Superfortresses delivered another on six prmcw heavy bommng iHmrnpn on the southernmost Jap mainland island of Kyushu today— er ft burden in trying to add" at least 10000 inhabitants to San Francisco and make them com fortable through conference ses (Continued on Pa fa Two) (Column Two) sions which may last two months The "Big Seven" hotels— the Fair mont Mark Hopkins St Francis Palace Sir Francis Drake- Clift V-- E and Whitcomb— will house most of Class B the official delegates hotels will take care of the overflow —the hundreds of advisors observers secretaries communication em nl rives and manv others TTniisincr these neonle will Provide as many headaches because the WASHINGTON April 18 (UP)— to rooms signment of delegations matter in Five industrialists representing a and suites is a delicate n of the nation's busiwhat is called "protocol" that the approach ness said today Protocol Widely Used of V-- E day was spurring workers Throughout this conference you on to buy more war bonds teleIn an unusual will hear the word protocols reIt is another expression phone press conference the busipeatedly for "diDlomatic custom and red ness men reported that in their plants were participatThrough the years a sys tape" tern of orestiee and of little nice ing fully in the seventh war loan ties has been built up as a Isort drive The advance payroll savings of Emily Post procedure in dealinternational in drive with opened April 9 The main people ing relations Protocol also applies to drive designed to raise $7000000-00- 0 in individual bond sales and the wav things are done by the we state department Yesterday $14000000000 altogether opens for discovered for instance that the the nation May 14 mavor's committee had planned Bonds purchased through weekly extensive flag decorations at San paycheck deductions In factories Francisco s magnificent civic cen- and business organizations will be ter The death of the president credited to the seventh war loan on the eve of the conference placed from April 9 until July 7 The business men Interviewed inperiod the country in a thirty-da- y of moumina during which all cluded Aaron Frank president of Meier and Frank department store (ConUnued on Page Two) Portland Ore (Column Four over-crowd- ed Proximity Spurs Sale - of War Bonds cross-sectio- ce long-distan- wage-earne- rs I Hundreds Lie Side By Side Awaiting Death in Hun City 4 have heen hurned He Pushed aside a bleached skull as If he were shaking ashes from ar ordiBUCHENWALD Germany April nary stove 17 (Delayed) (UP)— The smell j of "We put them in three at a too time" he said "It takej 25 mindeath In this city is aJmost utes to burn a man" He said great for human nostrils to bear this if he had thought calmly It comes from the hundreds upon about it manyas times hundreds of men lying here Then he said' "Most ol us were six days they defeated but not all I will show waiting to die For have been free but they are too you one who won" weak to leave too weak to move He took us to Emil Carlebach too weak to do anything but wait from FranWfnrt the nnlv Jew Who death- ever beat the SS on their home for ' As you pass they stare at you grounds with apologetic eyes as If they were still Carlebach's were "saying "Forgive me if we bright although eyes had been an he offend your clean ideas and your inmate of Buchenwald since 1938 He smiled quietly while he talked freshly washed bodies but we have too a entered with zoou omer been away from human beings We have lost our ' human but now practically all of them long i are dead I saw nazl records of odor" In one of many such houses at least 30000 who have died but 1700 lay stiffly' side by side but- I would not die I would not give tock to buttock with hardly room them that satisfaction Every night to turn Every night one out of I told myself 'Emil you must fifteen dies and every morning live" each man turns questioningly to Carlebach and other prisoners his neighbor as though to " ask worked in factories making parts ) "Are you yet alive?" for until American Jean Bass a French Socialist planes knocked the planl down from Paris caught by the nazis When one lagged or near La on nine months ago talked turned fromofhis them wild dogs work to us about it were let loose on him Asked why he did not leave now "Today their faces are easier and their eyes brighter" he said that he was free Carlebach only "Some of them still will die Of shrugged He's been in Buchendie-course many of them will but wald so long he Is almost afraid er now that the Americans are to world here they know they don't have Just beforetheyou enter Buchento burn They will be buried as wald proper there is a sign which other men" says in German Each Just Rass walVed nn most a rhost- - What He Deserves""For high pile of naked bodies stacked A medical officer stared at It like flour sacks in the yard and today and then looked toward the 1 I n 1 showed us the efficient nazl fur-- i — uln 4hsm SaiU IjtUU IH'f naces wnere at least 30000 bodies JI we tookiuu thenr at their word" By Robert Richards United Press Staff i bs i re-ent- ? ' Irmn fl y- - 250 Soviet Tanks flannilinns Arlvrmrino — —0 On Amsterdam British Near Elbe 3 PARIS 1 " lif f ft Okinawa invasion iifletenlarid Bisect Germany in By Al Dopking GUAM April 18 (AP)— More than 2280 Jap planes — a sizeable chunk of the Nip- nonese air force — were de-- V ' Period y Hit Kyushu B-2- 9s ' ican tradition" 30-Da- Jap Losses Average 76 Planes a Day By Lyle C Wilson Press Staff nited 30 38 40 52 29 63 52 J8 16 PAGES NEA Service AP Service 1945 87 "Rmssiaiis Within SigM of B erlin? s Invade Czeclio-§- L Killed in Action Fall to Allies Armed Forces Hear Veteran of First World War V-Aj- EVENING APRIL 18 OGDEN CITY UTAH WEDNESDAY 34 M 83 61 33 84 Or 48 62 32 76 i Omaha Phoenix 37 Pocatello 37 42 21 41 4- Truman Pledges Work True to ! MinMax MlnMax Ogdett Albuaueraue Bismarck BoiM noon tonight and Thursday slight- Q period ending at icvea (For m today) 24-ho- ur ' 1 n 18 April 1 POMERANIA" (AP) — U S Third army infantrymen invaded Czecho slovakia today bisecting Germany with a plunge into the Sudetenland which Hitler annexed to the reich after Munich in 1938 i The 90th division invaded Czechoslovakia " northwest of Asch J ' W I northwestern the in tip of the country The Americans had dashed eight miles from the area of Hof which is about 10 miles Ernie south of captured Plauen WAR REPORTER refront-lin- e The last lap of the drive to cut the greatest Pyle porter of this war has been in two was made withkilled in action The iskinny lit- Germany out opposition except for a brief war corretle Scrlpps-IIowar- d fightflurry of gunfire in the German spondent — beloved of U S — was over world men the ing village of Prex less than a mile killed by a Japanese machine from the border a front dispatch gun bullet on a little island off said Okinawa He had come close to death countless times before— in British Advance North Africa Sicily Italy and To the northwest British tanks France front swept forward on a to within 18 miles of Hamburg and 12 of Harburg which lies across the Elbe south of the great port The British reached to with in eight miles of the lower' Elbe and drove into the outskirts of Luneburg a city of 30000 against LONDON April 18 (UP)— Nazi broadcasts reported that a charge by 250 soviet tanks opened a new breach in line through Sieversdorf 17 miles east of the capital MUINSTtR jr le Beloved Writer Shot By Jap In South Pacific scattered resistance Canadians were reported unof ficially to have reached theZeesouthand ern banks of the Zuider Am20 of miles to within moved 17 WASHINGTON April (AP)— city of 793526 which is Ernie Pyle is dead The famous sterdama the largest in The Netherlands little war correspondent beloved Center of Leipzig alike by doughboys and five-stAs Tieiit-ne- n Georee S Pat- generals was killed Tuesday on ton's troops crossed the Czecho Ie i Jima : a small Island bring pff slovak frontier the - First army Motobu peninsula of Okinawa stormed to within 4000 yards of His death was announced by Sec the center of surrounded Leipzig the Seventh army cleared nan and and nazi retary of the Nayv Forrestal the city of Nuernberg President Truman issued a state the front Gen Eisen All along ment of condolence were gathering TTnrrectal sairl Pvlc was killed hower's armies final drive east for the strength Instantly by Jap machine gun fire ward to meet the Russians while standing beside a regimental The Ruhr triumph assumed pro commanding officer the greatest victory of portions The wirv little renorter for the war ofeven more cosuy 10 me Scripps-Howar- d newspapers who Germans than the defeat at btaiin-gra- d told the story oi tne war in u i language has been reporting the 309848 Prisoners fighting on Okinawa Previouslv the Pyle Already 309484 -prisoners have covered the war In North Africa been taken from the industrial Sicily Italy Britain and a ranee trap and 50000 more were expected to surrender today The GerTruman Statement mans lost 330000 in killed and President Truman said: "The na captured alone three ago at tion is quickly saddened again by Stalingrad in one of years history's dethe death oiarnie rjie imo man cisive battles The allies may in this war has so well told the have as many as 359000 prisoners an anstory of the American fighting man from the Ruhr as American tignting men wantea nihilation pocketbyintonight which the enit told emy also lost countless dead "More than any other man 'he became the spokesman of the ordi- Opposite Berlin so The Ninth army captured Magnary American in arms doingwas manv extraordinary things It (334358) securing a firm deburg his genius that the mass and power anchor on the Elbe river oppoof our military and naval forces site Berlin The industrial and comnever obscured the men who made mercial center was the 20th largthem est city of Germany before bombs "He wrote about a people In and shells reduced it to the smokarms as neonle still but a Deonle ing ruins which the "Hell on moving in a determination which Wheels" (Second armored) and Qia IlOl neeu preieuaiuua as a pan "Old Hickory" (30th) divisions capor power tured "TtfohoHv knows how manv Indi headquarters anSupreme vlduals in our forces and at home nounced that 2055575 Germans he helped with his writings But had been captured in the west Some 149000 yield all Americans understand now now since urteefv hnur haw ed yesterday to run the April to honestly he served his country and tal above 875000 his profession ne aeserves me Siege Around Berlin gratitude of all his countrymen" The manner of Pvle's death was Halle and Dessau were falling to not immediately made known The the First army which was closing up the southwest portion of a navy was in the midst of preparing tTl an announcement wnen me wnue gigantic siege arc around Berlin House issued Mr Truman s state 52 miles from the nearest of Lieut Gen Courtney H Hodges troops ment U 5 heavy bombers today oat Narrow Escapes tered railyards at Traunstem in Germany less than Pyle saw more war than many southeastern 25 miles from Hitler's mountain (ConUnued on Page Two) stronghold at Berchtesgaden (Column Three) More than 750 U S heavies bat tered rail targets in western Czechoslovakia and southern Ger many "while 600 fiehter escorts raided airfields in the same areas in another ruinous blow at the di minishing luftwaffe Canadian Halifax bombers struck Helgoland German fortress island in the North sea guarding the ap proaches to Emden ' Bremen and WASHINGTON April 16 (UP)— Hamburg American and British dirjlomats During tne night Benin was were hopeful today that Russian pounded by the first coordinated blow from British and Rus Foreign uommissar v m moiocov doublebombers Other night-flyin- g would come to the capital pre sian conr nazi escape rail eieventa-nouhammered to make planes pared cessions in the "big three's" ways into Czechoslovakia and air toughest diplomatic problem —the fields in southern Germany Polish issue Unless he does officials felt Britain Russia and the United Farragut Will Become States will enter next week's world security conference without Rehabilitation Camp united front their much hoped-fo- r WASHINGTON April 18 (AP) The Russian statesman is expected late this week and his ar- Camp Farragut Idaho will be the rival will begin the first of the site of the navy rehabilitation profor quarterly meetings of bigat three gram for men under discipline uwor Yalta ministers planned itep regulations breaking foreign There was no doubt that the Polish hir fR Idaho) said todav Shift of the program headquardeadlock would be the top topic ters from La Mesa Calif to the on the agenda Observers believe that President THahn ramn will be made before Truman instructed Stettinius to the end of the year Dworshak Jacobs chief stand firm on the quoted Adm Randall s on new Polish to personnel-ainsist the of having said decision navy that there estimated admiral himself Mr The Truman government such 18000 of disan to be would an average will have opportunity cuss the issue when Molotov pays prisoners during the next fiscal a call at the White House before year About 80 per cent of them would return to duty he said going on to San Francisco ar ' ' : " D-d- ay warm-hearted- lv T Allies Hope for " Red Concessions -- J Katiel The I : ft EI3 Gettinge4 -- OZNANl 0 Hil(eleim HolberstedtO 14 31 1 nVfurt if NALLf k Giestea trfr Rus f 1 offensive had reached its climactic phase" with nine attacKins soviet armies scoring new penetrations west of Kuestrin on the jWarsaw-Berii- n y and north of t al wic mues Zi normeasi Wriezen : capital Oder Bridgeheads" Linked - CHIMNITZ super-highwa- i Hoiiii vvvvfvvvivl777v s i newspaper soviet Mav lhat the sians were fighting withii sight of uerun burning tmMTJ llenoth sain the a aK S official aA viet I SflW IMuhlhAutcn EUcnechia j 40-mi- 4± HANNOVER -- Anglo-Americ- an d Kelberg Tank-ridin- g 1 A 1 Open Breach in Line Above Capital A Aim M TIerltn ea rller revealed that the red army also had linked up all its Oder river bridgehead to form front east of Ber a solid Isolated Jfrank- all but had and lin furt the capital's main outer de 45-mi- le - Karlsruhe " - fense bastion To the south the Germans said kuitttEWElftS other Russian forces stormed nine 1 'ST miles beyond the Neisse river a of the Oder to the tributary Nieclrv area 45 miles northeast of Dresden and possiblya 65 niilesmafrom i AUSTRIA ?V a Junction witn tne American inira fWn '' v i" army Ttuc!?9n threw onerational The reserves into battle beyond the American Third armv columns crossed the Neisse in an attempt toi torce a Gerquick decision the DNB agency Cxechoslovak border today 100 miles front Pfajerentttartb of said battledfor forces American man 'releh British tanks closed MardeburPSile Leipzig and Nuernberg and soviet armies i per-ha- p 2000000 Soviets ItT nine Meanwhile of Hamburg to front from Stettin ?JSo5oo men were attacking on a IfO-miAltogether orrJiaos 12000000 into a continuous soviet troops' were on the march Goerlitx and linked their Oder river bridgeheads Red front Fleet said the in the west alonfir a line east of Berlin The soviet newspaper RuStans were fighting "within sight'! of the ruined German capital from the Btlc port of Stettin to Goerlltz in the Sudeten foothills the nazis said Arnlm Schoenbertf German Transocean Agency commentator said Marshal uregory k itnuKov s First White Russian army had made vdeep ' penetrations" of the German defenses between Frankfurt 33 miles Oder river stronghold Oder-Spree east of Berlin and the — A 18 canal (AP) LONDON April Editor's Note: The question of what to do with the German German radio reporter quoted Rus sian prisoners today as saying that people after the war was submitted to a group of an order ot tne day oy marsnai School-hou- se pupils at the Little Red Stalin read to them at the start Inc in the Greenwich of the new eastern front offensive Village area of New York City resent said the war would end April 25 the following The pupils to the deliberations of their with Berlin falling to the red army port United Press: No order of the day broadcast HJTAMTf A Anril 1R rtTP— U S By The Class a mentioned has Moscow spe from stormed the outskirts troops today 18 (UP)— NEW YORK April of Ger nf RatMiin ' Jan citadel from Whichi the for cific date collapse This is what we've decided should havt rescued and such a forecast would Filipino guerrillas vuuu be done about Hitler his accom- many more civilians in me than be contrary to Stalin's previous last three weeks of the and Germany people plices policies The civilians who were: brought after V-- E day: to the inva to the American lines included a months In the prior 1 The death penalty for all the Presi sion "of Normandy German propa number of U S citizens s daughter leaders Osmena dent Sergio several times broadcast 2 Nazis who are over 36 years gandists Milagros and Brig Gen Manuel V announcements allied that landings Koxas speaKer oi me rnu ascertained old and who have been wnnlri be attemDted at specific ippines lormer assembly United Nations periods and exulted when each of collaborators by the Four members or tne iiipino these passed without incident should be shot collaborationist government also 3 Nazis under 36 should be put were captured by "the daring" Igo-rinto labor battalions natives who stole into Baguio 5 Youth over 16 should be sent at night and brought out tne ci to labor battalions vilians In groups ranging irom 5 Youth under 16 should be two to 1800 persons on sDecial with emphasis Collaborationists Face Trial C reasoning racial equality and de Of oe sent ren fWifrlas MacArtriur said mocracy Offenders should to special schools the four collaborationists would be NEW YORK Anril 18 (UP)- 6 Women should be investigatfnr the duration of the war hM ed and given treatments similar to Threat of a strike by 18000 New turned over to the Philthen and teie-nhnYork local and and the men ippines government "for trial nnerators ended todav as judgment" t N 7 Teachers must be imported 8 Nazi books should be sal- union officials and company repre MacArthur also announced that on a tormuia ror of the 33rd division had vaged and new books written for sentatives agreed troops settlement of a wage dispute the Germans reached the norlhwesterr outskirts of Baguio former Jap headquar( y BAVARIA S NJVNi n J 1 S I) nvini xTf iktwther le 180-mi- le War End Set By Pupils Outline Fate for Nazis Russ April 25 I - 719 Civilians Freed From Jans ot teri Tlione Strike long-distan- ne ce - Young German SS Men Laugh As 700 'Slaves' Burn Alive i 4 sticking up from the freshly turned By Clinton B Conger earth United Press Staff rara said the original 2000 were WITH U S NINTH ARMY IN jammed into a freight train for a cross-countGERMANY April 18 (UP)— Seven seven-da- y trip durwhich and Russian they ate onij breads ing hundred Polish Thev finallv halted at Mieste Hungarian slaves cringed on the eight miles from Gardelegen and straw in the small the death march began gasoline-soake- d inose barn who faltered were shot dead wher A nazi youth in SS uniform they fell not over 16 opened the barn door When they reached Gardelegen prisoners political and threw in a lighted match As 300 German guards on bloody the flames began to lick he were appointed the 13th 800 were marched Friday laughed and slammed the door inneTv ham on the plain tn the bolted Some of the prisoner slaves who fell on hundred The ran As door a they through rear ' were killed wnere they from the barn machine guns the way ' teen-age- d more troops manned by lay' mass mur torch the rame Then Gercut them down Then the mans went to the door emptied der The 700' were herded into a barn 100 by 50 feet and made their guns inside and threw in tn straw measure if on thelater the for hand grenades good SS minutes young Five for before they finally shut it his came match in with fiend good Gaza and others tried frantically The smell of burning flesh came The screams of to dig holes beenath the barn wall from the barn men being "roasted alive ripped with their hands Three of them an hour and got their the air And the young SS troops dug foroutside Evenfor breath heads laughed Such was the story told 13th tually they made holes big enough corps investigators today by 10 to wriggle through survivors of an original group of In the darkness thev hid inouta 2000 slave workers moved from field but a dog sniffed (hem an aircraft factory in eastern Ger- and howled A German who in- vestigated shot a Pole among the many I Most of escaped the story was told by a trio but Gaza and a friend musician and crawled and walked to a haggard Hungarian Bonde Gaza He Jed investigators farmhouse two miles away There hid without food and water through the barn which became 24a they for two days crematorium near Gardelegen dn Anril 14th thev said SS Some miles north of Magdeburg in the troops returned and killed six bodies still smouldered ashes Beside the ruins was a survivors they touna in me aeawi neat trench with a charred leg barn ry cas-soak- : " Philippines-based- " bombers con- tinued the firm blockade jof China sea shipping and sank or destroyed at least 21 enemy vessels! includand ing a destroyer A single ' navy Liberator acan counted for two of the ships2000-ton 8000-to- n and ja transport Singafreighter in a raid Onwas pore Saturday anight It d the first time that Philippines-basebig enemy-hel- d plane hit Singapore port at the southern tip of the Malay peninsula Most of the rescued civilians from Baguio were In good physibeen cal condition They had mainwho aided by the Igorotes the tained communications with 33rd division by what the Ameritelesuo-chaser- v j j - cans dubbed the graph'! - "G-stri- ng ' ed " - ters in the Philippines and "onetime summer capital for the islands Two other American columns at the same time reached" points less than three mues from the southwestern and southeastern limits of the northern Luzon city Bulletins WITH U S NINTH ARMY IN GERMANY April 18 (UP) — found Troops of the 30th divisioncontainat Magdeburg a vault worth ing silver and currency and a number of stored art treasures $20000000 FRANCISCO April 18' war corre- Pyle Ernie (AD— spondent who was killed yesterRyukyu day on Ie Island in the was inchain south of Japan bullet three with killed stantly He w&s wounds In the temple found peaceful In death his face i:U covered with his helmet left hand clutched a mtrlno fatigue cap SAN |