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Argus-Leader from Sioux Falls, South Dakota • Page 1

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Argus-Leaderi
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Sioux Falls, South Dakota
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THE DAILY AKOTTS -LEADER EdiikrL "South Dakota's Leading Newspaper" 10 PAGES SIOUX FALLS, SOUTH DAKOTA, SATURDAY, APRIL 28, 1945. PRICE FIVE CENTS nil CLOSE 0 Reds Crack Berlin's Inner Defense Ring Warren E. Green, 75, Ex-Governor, Dies JITTERY JAPS PREDICT NEW YANK ATTACK Americans at Edges of Two Okinawa Airstrips, in Sight of Davao ALLIES DRIVE WEDGES INTO NAZI REDOUBT New Junction With Russians Strengthens Across Germany PCfTUJV Vp.nkOwKa. Son, JutnaAjco LARGER VOICE DEMANDED BY TINY NATIONS Prospects of Success Are Brightened by Russian I Cooperation By JOHN M. HIGHTOWER San Francisco, April 28.

Knre close-knit themselves, the big (our managing this United Nations tonference today ran Into a small Yanks Smash Northward to Swiss Border Cut Off All German Escape Routs From Northwest ern Italy Rome, April 28. Fi American troops, striking across the Po valley and Into the Alups, reached the Swiss border today and cut off all northwestern Italy from exits to Germany, the Milan national liberation radio reported today. The American earlier had speared close to Bergamo, 125 miles south-west of the Brenner pass and 30 miles from the border In a swift dash to outflank Milan, 28 miles to the southwest. This placed the 5th army almost at the southern tin afSfSTYVr 1 SS ft. ljA CMillOttNU0 By RICHARD K.VSISt HKE London, April 28.

The German high command declared today that soviet troops had crashed through Berlin's Inner defense ring and were fighting on site of gestapo headquarters. Nazi planes were flying in reinforcements, food, and ammunition to the fanatical garrison, the German communique said, German armies facing the Ameri cans on the Elbe have been with drawn in an attempt to relieve the capital, the war bulletin said. Earlier, the Germans said a relief army was nearlng Berlin from a Russian trap te the southeast. Only one quarter of the flaming, crumbling city remained in najii hands. Soviet troops were boring in block by block, and other divi sions sped westward in a push to Isolate the last nazl Baltic ports, Russian correspondents in Ber lin declared trapped Germans were trying to escape in wholesale fash- ion.

German officers could not; halt the suicidal resistance because of nazi SS overlords, the correspondents added. These front dispatches said many nazis were discarding uniforms for civilian clothes. The broadcast German communi jzba ft of Lake Como. Capture Airport A 1st armored division spearhead that seized the Ghedi airport near Bergamo in a 31-mlle advance moved on the field so fast a Ger- iimn M-rgeaiu assignea 10 Dlow the installations was captured before he could touch off a fuse. On the Ligurian coast a special tasK force entered Pontremoli, 20 miles north of La Spezia.

en route to Parma, allied headquarters disclosed. Other 5th army troops smashed into the great port of Genoa. The "Free Milan" radio declared German commanders were endeavoring to negotiate a general surrunder of their hopelessly trapped forces in northern Italy. British Mop Up British 8th army units were mopping up a number of isolated enemy pockets south of the Adige river, but met determined resistance from positions north of the river. Fifth army troops north and south of the Po river continued their pursuit of the enemy against light, scattered resistance.

Some enemy positions and fortifications were found abandoned. The 1st armored division spearhead scored the greatest advance on the 5th army sector, rolling forward about 31 miles and capturing the airport near Bergamo. Stubborn Resistance The 8th army was meeting stubborn resistance along the so-called. Adige or Venetian line, where the enemy was expected to rally remnants of his disorganized forces. The allied headquarters communique reported that Lt.

Gen. Richard Heidrich, commander of the crack 1st nazi parachute corps, swam the Po river from the south to the north bank, dressed down his troops and told them the British must be stopped. In an effort to blunt the 8th's punch the Germans threw fresh troops from their 155th division Into the line, where the parachutists and panzers seemed to have plenty of fight left. Doting Parents Blamed for Soldiers' Neurosis New York, April 28. "Moms" are largely responsible for- the psychoneurotic cases arising from the war, declares Dr.

Edward A. Strecker, psychiatric consultant for the army and navy. "Moms" are doting mothers who keep their children from learning how to meet actual conditions of living, he said Friday In a lecture at the New York university college of medicine. Sometimes, he added, "pop is the mom." Java, S. D.

By order of the county commissioners of Walworth county, another county sale of real estate will be held on May 1. This Includes four quarter sections of farm property, three Selby lots, 32 Mobridge lots, and a three-acre gravel pit. During the past six months the county has sold considerable land and it is now believed that nearly 80 per cent of the county's farmers own their own farms. U. Britain Turn Down German Offer to Surrender Watertown, April 28.

Warren E. Green, 75, governor of South Da kota 1931-33, died in a hospital here late Friday afternoon. In failing health for several years, the retired Hazel farmer was taken to the hospital here last Sat urday suffering double pneumonia and a heart illness. His condition gradually grew weaker. Faced Serious Problems A "dirt farmer little known in state politics before his election as governor, Warren E.

Green faced serious problems soon after his Republican administration replaced that of W. J. Bulow, Democrat. Low farm prices, drouth, an unprecedented grasshopper plague and the general depression of 1931 combined to produce critical economic conditions. To meet the situation, Mr.

Green -organized and directed state relief agencies, He was active In seeking federal loans to aid farmers. Three Terms in Senate Mr. Green emerged from comparative obscurity to attain the governorship in his first campaign for a major office. A Hamlin county farmer, he entered politics by serv ing three terms In the state senate in 1907, 1923, and 1925. He was also a member of the state board of charities and corrections for six years, 1913 to 1919.

In 1930, the Hamlin county farmer entered a five-cornered race for the Republican nomination as governor. Running last in the May primary, he was still a candidate at the party's state convention because no aspirant had a popular vote large enouh to get the nomi- nation. At the Republican convention, Mr. Green's primary showing made him a "dark horse" candidate, but he won the nomination after extended balloting when Brooke How ell, Frederick, threw his support to the Hamlin county man to keep the party choice from going to Miss Gladys Pyle, Huron, who ran first in the primary. Fought Fred Smith One of Mr.

Green's first acts as governor was to make good a campled by asking resignation of Fred R. banking super- intendent, who later was sentenced to serve seven years for embezzlement. Until relief problems became pressing early in the summer of 1931, Mr. Green's administration was uneventful, except for work of political appointments. State Committee to Push Campaign for World Capital Rapid City, April 28.

on-Preliminary plans for the formation of a state-wide committee, headed by Gov. M. Q. Sharpe, to present South Dakota's invitation for a permanent United Nations capital in the Black Hills, were made at a meeting heer late Friday at which Gov. Sharpe and H.

Pankow, state publicity director, were present. It was decided to Issue a formal invitation by the governor and to prepare a brochure of 12 pages, for circulation by the people of the state throughout the nation. The South Dakota congressional delegation has been advised of the plans and will be Included in a general committee to work with the state committee. Gov. Sharpe revealed that he had been asked by Gov.

Edward Martin of Pennsylvania to give support to Philadelphia's bid for the world capital, but he rejected it and said he would push the Black Hills bid. and urged that aU governors support the plan to insure getting the capital In the United States. receives iirst sheet ot 50 stamps tAP Wircphoto) a a a ration challenge of a world organization dominated by major allied war victors. Spokesmen for Australia, Belgium and Bolivia urged more responsible role (or the world's smaller states. Their action signaled the long expected effort to shift the balance between the great and the small.

One immediate success of this pressure was expansion of the conference executive committee from 11 to Now the small-state group aims at Increasing the memberships on the world security council beyond the proposed at Dumbarton Oaks. As constituted by a 46-nation tonference, the executive committee includes the big-three, China and rrance. which are to have permanent security council seats, and these other countries: Australia, Brazil, Canada, Chile, Czechoslovakia, Iran, Mexico, Holland and Yugoslavia. Harmony Restored Restoration of harmony among the big powers brought the conference into its fourth day with prospects for success brightened by Russia's demonstrated willingness to compromise. Some delegates even hoped for a reorganization of the Polish Warsaw government along lines accept-hie to Britain and the United States.

Whether it could be achieved in time for an invitation to be represented here was doubtful. A session of the conference steering committee, which started out rouchly enough, ended In a round of handshaking and backslapping Friday. Solutions Approved It produced these quickly ratified Solutions to issues which had given the conference on peace a belligerent start: Through Russian Insistence, the delegates tossed tradition out the window and elected four presidents Instead of one Foreign Commissar Molotov of Russia, Foreign Minister Soong of China, British Foreign Secretary Eden and Secretary of State fitettinius. It was agreed that these four should rotate the honor of presiding over conference sessions. For the two sessions scheduled today, Soong drew the first and Molotov the second.

Eden will have his turn Monday. Under Anglo-American insistence, the steering committee refused to complicate management of conference work by having rotating chairmanships for the key executive and steering committees. Molotov finally agreed that Eden, Poong and he would "delegate" their authority to Stettinius for this Jon. That made the American secretary in fact the chief of those committees. Vote Pledge Kept The Russian proposal to Include the White Russian and Ukrainian nvtets in the proposed world assembly of nations went through without a hitch-.

Stettinius endorsed It. under specific Instructions from President Truman to carry out the pledge which the late President Roosevelt made to Premier Stalin at the Yalta big-three meeting. A proposal made by Molotov to at his present Warsaw government at this conference was talked down, outmaneuvered and finally smothered under a resolution, which the conference approved, telling the big-three to settle their difference over Poland and expressing bene it would be done before this tonference ends. (jJswdhsA, OFFICIAL FORECAST Konth Dakota: Partly- cloudy, faltered showers Black Hills late this afternoon and showers and thunderstorms southeast. High to 70.

Tartly cloudy tonight. Rain showers and thunderstorms southeast. Cooler north and west. Low 35 to 40. Partly cloudy and fooler east and south Sunday.

low: Cloudy and iccaltmal HkIh ruin Sunday and In aoultiweat and exlmiie el loniRlu. No decided chiume In trm-ppitttui-eti but becoming ctxtlrr In i it me west Sundav atiernoon and nlkTlit. lUN.NESOTA: Moxtlv cloudy and artiirreU Jiaht showera Sunday and In exlremr nhei and extreme norlhwent tuniilit. ainhtly warmer northrant and tnnlaht becoming cooler In Bed Kiver yalley Sunday. I.orat Temperatures Tadar VMlerdar 4 p.

so a p. 12 midnight K'-nn Sunrlne Indar p. Bunnet By LEONARD MUX! MAN AumMK rreu War HI tor Japanese propagandists today forecast another American Invasion stemming from Okinawa where three U. 8. Infantry divisions fought through tortuous terrain to the northern edges of two battle-scarred airstrips on the island's southern front.

Against light opposition the U. S. 24th division drove another 10 miles through the Apo mountains of Mindanao in the southern within sight of Davao gulf. i Japanese stubbornly defended their mountain positions on three north ern Philippine sectors. Tokyo made no attempt to guess where the next U.

S. amphibious blow might strike. Eighty trans ports, escorted by at least 30 war ships, were reported in the Oki nawa area. Fear New Invasion Most of these have been cruising around the area, the Domel news agency said in a dispatch, reporting that it appeared U. S.

"nav.il forces In Okinawa waters have been preparing for new operations for the last few days. A small force of Nipponese sui cide planes attacked this fleet Friday, Radio Tokyo claimed sinking two cruisers, including the Savan nah, and four transports. Japanese also asserted a surface craft sank a submarine In the southwest Pacific. A hundred or more Super forts raided six enemy air bases on Ry-ushu island in Japan proper this morning for the third consecutive day. One B-29 was lost in Friday's strike.

Near Air Fields Some 325 miles to the south U. S. 7th division patrols crawled almost to the northern edge of Yonabaru airstrip on the east coast of south ern Okinawa, while the 27th smashed to within striking distance i Vje T. 7. thf.

cve" T.J1". make Pos- slble a final assault on both strips. In Burma, where progress has often been as slow as the current battle on Okinawa, powerful ar mored spearheads of the British Uth army swept 58 mlels down the Burma railway and main trunk road in 24 hours. Guerrilla forces. perhsps those led and organized by Americans, operated in front of the armored column and protected its flanks.

Nazi Postwar Plan Revealed Organizatoin Program Will Not Start Until 5 Years After V-E Day At the German frontier, April 28. (T New plans for a postwar nazi party contemplate work by a directing committee that will not get started until five years after the end of hostilities, it was learned today through reliable channels from Berlin. The reports said Probaganda Minister Paul Joseph Goebbels, Labor Front Director Dr. Robert Ley and Nazi Party Chancellory Chleg Martin Barmann laid the plans at a meetinf April 12 in Berlin. It was decided to divide Germany into four "groups," north, south, east and west, the reports said.

Each group was to be headed by a "vorsteher," or chief. Felix Hart-ner was named vorsteher for the east group and Harts Presuss for the south two "unknowns'' in the nazi hierarchy. These may be pseudonyms. Breslau was chosen center for the east group and Munich for the south, while Berlin was held the probable choice for the north and Cologne for the west. The new organization was expected to follow the communist party plan of creating "cells." Captured Nazi General Asks Command to Quit London, April 28.

tP) Declaring the "war Is irrevocably lost," Lt. Gen. Helnrlch Klrchheim urged the German high command last night to "make the fuehrer cease fighting at once." The first high ranking German officer captured by the Americans to make such an appeal, Klrchheim broadcast his message from the Luxembourg radio. HITLER HAS STROKE, SAYS SWEDE PAPER Stockholm, April 28. (AT) The newspaper Svenska Dagbladet, quoting "reliable circles," said today that Hitler had suffered a cerebral hemorrhage and was near death inside Berlin.

"It Is believed that an immediate announcement of Hitler's death would mean the mass capitulation of a great number of the newspaper added. of for By AUSTIN BEALMEAR Paris, April 28. P) The American 7th army closed today within 25 miles of Munich and broadcasts fro mthat nazi citadel said a revolt was seething in the city. Augsburg, third city of Bavaria, fell to I.t. Gen.

Alexander M. Patch's troops. The 7th army reached tha Aus-: trlan frontier at Fuessen, 55 miles lover the towering Alps from the Brenner pass after charging 45 miles into the western end of the Crmin narlnnal rertnnhf Three armies were advancing on i Munich and threatening to encircle the city, third largest in Germany. Gen. Patton sent U.

S. 3rd army infantry 31 miles north of the city while his tank divisions moved down the Danube valley in Austria toward an imminent junction with the Russians west of Vienna to seal off Czechoslovakia and carve bisected Germany into three death traps. French Near Munich The French 1st army was 40 milea southwest of Munich and deep in the nazi redoubt. The closest approach to Munich was fro mthe west beyond Landsberg. Third army troops were chattering back and forth by radio with Russians in Austria.

At bvt reports, the Americans were barely 25 miles from Llnz, one of Hitler's favorite cities and on the last intact route into the redoubt from the Pilsen-Prague munitions area. Three allied armies in the south put 60,000 Germans into prison cages In the past 24 hours swelling to 1,219,217 the number captured this month and the total D-day to 2,548,922. The fortress of Germany had been broken into two traps. The pocket in the north containing Berlin and Hamburg was barely the size of Indiana. The mountainous southern holdout region was a little larger than Colorado.

Pockets Under Assault Both were under assault and shrinking, although heavy rams grounded scourging air power. At Fuessen, the 7th army burst across the Austrian frontier. Patch's troops already were a half mile high in the Alps In their invasion of the redoubt, which includes the Austrian panhandle, part of the Italian Alps and a region of comparable size in southern Babarla. Fuessen is at a natural entrance to the Austrian Tyrol with roads south down the Lech river and south into the Valley of the Inn the main east-west route through th Alps. Germany was cut in two In the center and the Russians reported new junctions with American forcei on the Elbe.

The iron band between the southern and northern German pockets was perhaps 60 miles wide. SWISS DELEGATION SHIFTS TO BAVARIA Bern, Switzerland, April 28. OP) The Swiss delegation which represents the interests of the United States and Britain in Germany has left Berlin and entered tha Germans' Bavarian redoubt area, the Basel National Zeitung reported from St. Margarethen, Switzerland, today. The delegation will Join whatever nazl government is there in an effort to continue its activities on behalf of British-American Interests, especially for the protection of some 30,000 U.

S. and British prisoners said to be within the redoubt area, the account said. Hayti, S. D. The Lutheran church will sponsor a father son banquet Monoay.

Rev. O. S. Hel-geson is in charge of arrangements and about 100 are expected to be in attendance. DEATH BEFORE DISHONOR With "Death before Dishonor" atoned on his arm the terrible moment of choice arrived and he chose death for himself instead of his buddies.

In a shell crater occupied by three other marines. Marine Pvt. Richard B. Ander-, son prepared to throw a grenade. SliDping from his hand it rolled towards his pals at the bottom of the hole.

There was no time to retrieve the armed weapon so Anderson fearlessly chose to sacrifice himself. He hurled his body on the grenade and took the full impact of the explosion. Following this act of hero-Ism, the marines he had saved charged from the shell crater and fought their way to safety through Jap snipers. "We felt the least we could do was to get him a Jap apiece," mourned one of them. A true story like this one should prove to you that the least you can do Is to buy him an extra Bond.Sell something you don't use with a Want Ad.

Just phone 5000 and ask for "Want Ads." am que said the Russians had made new penetrations from the north in Charlottenburg, and from the south across Templehof airdrome, with "fighting for the center of the city begun on Alexanderplatz and at Haleches Tor." The Alexanderplatz runs through the heart of Berlin and was a principal commercial center of the reich capital. Germans withdrawn from the Elbe front are attacking eastward toward surrounded Berlin, the bul letin added. The enemy communique also de clared Germans were attacking to' ward the north" in the Elbe region where American-Russian forces had merged. The HaleschM Tor or gate Is 1 mile from I nter den Linden and the same distance from the Tiergarten. One soviet correspondent in the city said "among the 'civilians' our men are stopping are not only sol diers but officers, even commanders of companies and batalions who were not able to continue the sense.

less resistance, but also were unable to surrender in organized fashion. And next to this line of people there is passing a long column in uniforms. Others have surrounded with the aid of the white flag." London, April 28. AV-Heinrich Himmler was reported today to have offered unconditional surrender to Great Britain and the United States, but Prime Minister Churchill In a special statement declared that only unconditional surrender to all three big powers would be accepted by the allies. The prime minister neither confirmed nor denied reports that surrender had been offered to the two western allies, but not to Russia.

Churchill declared: "It has been reported by Reuters that unconditional surrender was offered by Himmler to Britain and the United States only. "Further that Britain and the United States have replied saying they will not accept unconditional surrender exceut on behalf of all the allies Including Russia. "No doubt at a time like this all kinds of reports of proposals for German surrender from various parts of the German reich are rife, as these are In harmony with the enemy's desperate situation. "His majesty's government have no information to give about any no information to give about any of them at this moment. But lt must be emphasized that only unconditional surrender to the three major powers will be entertained, and that the closest accord prevails between the three powers." Unofficial reports of a German unconditional surrender offer to Britain and the United States were published promptly In the British press today.

The allied-controlled Luxembourg radio, as heard by the FCC, said Heinrich Himmler had offered surrender, "Here is a special message," the broadcast said. "The following mesage has been conveyed to the foreign ministers of the United JStates, Great Britain and Russia: neinricn minmier seni, a message in which he guarantees the unconditional surrender of Germany to the United States and Great Britain. The governments of the United States and of Great Britain have replied that unconditional surrender will be accepted only if the offer is addressed to all the allies. i BELGIAN MONARCH'S LIBERATION DENIED Brussels, April 28. P) An official announcement declared to day that all reports concerning King Leopold's liberation were without foundation.

Rumors originating In Switzer land this wpek said the nazi-held ruler was expected to cross the bor der into that neutral country. Ex-Governor Warren E. Green The Hamlin county man easily won renominatlon In the spring of 1932, defeating the late Carl Gun' derson of Mitchell. In the fall election, however, he was a victim of the Democratic landslide, getting 120.473 votes to 158.058 for the succeeding governor, Tom Berry. Came to State in 1881 Mr.

Green was born In Jackson county, Wisconsin, March 10, 1870. Coming to Hamlin county with his parents in 1881, he was educated in the Castlewood grade schools and Watertown high school. He engaged in farming near Hayti, becoming a successful grower of hih grade cattle and hogs. Active in community affairs, he was president of his district school board for 15 years. He served as a promoter of farmers' cooperative organizations, and was a director of elevator associations at Hazel and Grover.

Mr. Green was married and the father of four children, three sons and a daughter. One son. Max. served as his private secretary while i Mr.

Green was governor. Funeral Tuesday funeral services will -be- held Tuesday afternoon at 2:30 In the First Methodist church In Water- town and burial will be in Mount Hope cemetery, at Watertown. The body will lie in state in the Shaw-Messer chapel here until the time of the services. Soldier Show Here Tonight 'Production Urgency Caravan' to Be Presented at Coliseum The 7th service command's newest all soldier road-show, "Production Urgency Caravan," will be staged ata 8 o'clock tonight at the coliseum, featuring the 28-ptece 306th army service forces band from O'Reilly general hospital, Springfield, Mo. There will also be a 17-piece dance orchestra.

From Camp Crowder, comes a strong quartet composed of top concert musicians. Featuredas a top soloist with the caravan is Pvt. Max Lan- ner, Viennese pianist and conductor. Another highlight of the all-GI show will be the 27-voice male chorus. Comic master of ceremonies will be Sgt.

Hal Fontenelle and Pvt. Irwin Bishlnese will give Impersonations. There will be no admission charge but children must be accompanied by their parents to be admittedl. Nazis Strip, Beat 3 Girls to Death Paris, April 28. Three French girls were stripped and whipped to death in the presence of 250 American soldiers in a German prison camp, M.

E. Walter, managing editor of the Houston Chronicle and member of the editors party investigating German camps, said today. Walter quoted Sgt. William Sand ler, a Kentucklan who said he witnessed the murders and later saw the whips. "The sergeant said te Germans had discovered the French women and the Americans were mutually helping each other in the camp and they were determined to halt It," Walter related.

"The prisoners were assembled one morning and the women, all of them were young, were lined up in front of them and forced to undress. "German guards then took cat-o'-nine-talls and beat them until they died. The sergeant said lt took only about 20 minutes." MAYOR AND PRIEST HANGED BY NAZIS London, April 28. The allied controlled Luxembourg radio reported today that the mayor and priest were hanged publicly in Regensburg by nazi authorities the day before the city fell to the U. S.

3rd army. The broadcast said the two led peace demonstration. Stettinius Gets Stamp Washington, April 28. (flV-The White House press secretary said today it is "perfectly clear" that there can be no unconditional surrender by Germany unless it is made to all the allies. Secretary Jonathan Daniels made this comment in connection with reports not confirmed by any allied official that Heinrich Himmler, nazi leader, had offered to surrender to Great Britain and the United States, but not to Russia.

Sees Statement Daniels also had seen Prime Minister Churchill's statement that offers of this kind, if msde, could not be accepted because unconditional surrender would, have to be made to all three major allies. "It is perfectly lear," Daniels told newsmen, "that at times like this there will be lots of rumors. "It is also perfectly clear that there can be no unconditional surrender unless made to all the allies." Daniels said he knew nothing about any surrender "proposals." "This government," he repeated, "has nothing to say at this time. We all know there are and will be many rumors." 'No Connection' Asked whether President Truman's long conference Friday with military chiefs had any bearing on the surrender rumors, Daniels re plied: "No, not specifically." In reply to an inquiry, Acting Secretary of State Joseph C. Grew said he had nothing to say at this time.

There was no tendency to dis. count the possible authenticity of such rumors. Although there was no denial that such an offer had come from inside Germany, neither was there any official confirmation. BELGIAN SCULPTOR FREED IN GERMANY With the 99th Infantry Division, April 28. P) Paul.Struyf, Belgian sculptor who decorated a number buildings during his 17 years residence in the United States, was liberated today from the Trossen-furt concentration camp.

The artist had been forced to work in a fertilizer factory. Struyf did sculptural decorations the Inquirer, Packard and Elks buildings in Philadelphia. the Bowery Savings bank, Roxy and Capitol theatres In New York, and the Florida homes of Henry Ford and Thomas Edison. SCRAMBLE TEN Morrison, 111., April 28. The highway department was ceiled hurriedly to spread cinders on the highway cast of here.

Ten cases of eggs Mad fallen from a truck In a collision. 4 r. Jq -Jl' 1 i iiq. jj Slate and 'emperaturn, aiiux Fall! ttitron Waiertown ei'rre I'mmnn alnbrMaa J'nliinn Miirhl Wrltna RapNl cfw National Temperatures 34 hours prectdlns 7 a. m.

H. L. H. L. .61 4S Bneardxh 65 34 44 Philip 9 .611 39 Aberdeen .67 43 Bioltx City 34 Chirago .71 4J Dublin 3S KannasOlty 47 ,7 44 1 Anfln ..711 4 Mmnenpnlia 44 ,4 4 New Orleani 74 .81 34 New York beuifinry ol Stale SletUniiis ttcfti bearing the name of the late President Roosevelt at San Francisco for the 1st president's collection.

San Francisco's postmaster William McCarthy makes the presentation..

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