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Greeley Daily Tribune from Greeley, Colorado • Page 1

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Stettin, German Port On Baltic, Is Blasted In Heavy RAF Attack Assoult Is Linked With Berlin Fight; Kiel Base Pounded; 95 Nazjs Downed By GLADWIN HILL (AuoilatcJ Prcstl London, Qer- port on tho Baltic, was blasted by thV RAF's heavy tbwii wreckers last night and. Berlin was bombed by Jlosqulto raiders in a double-edged assault calculated to disrupt the emergency supply system ot the battered canl- tal and shatter an Important maritime lifeline to the Russian front. Tho air ministry said the heavy Stettin attack was carried out In bright moonlight. Berlin Hit Again Berlin "was hit for. the second night In a The Mosnullos dl- reeled other blows at targets In western a and northern Prance.

Fifteen -aircraft were lost In tho assorted attacks which included the 1,300 mile round trip raid ou The latter port, a city of 260,000 which is 75 miles norlheast of was last hit on April 20 when buildings of a 61-ncro chemical factory vera destroyed' and severe damage done to siUKe oil factories, barracks, military depots and ammunition stores. Is Rail Center Bedlses being an important ma. rlno and railroad terminal for sup. ply of Germany's Baltic front in Russia; Stetlln Is a key peg in Hit- l.er's industrial structure where many "Bubtnarines and small ships ere turned but. With extensive damage In the last few weeks to communications Into Berlin a disruption of the i Liquor Store Open For Womejt Only Assoelited Birmingham, liquor store for women only is bo- Ing operated In downtown by the.itate "alcoholic beverage control boai'd, E.

Rayi chairman, announced today. A nearby ABC dispensary, Dr. Ray said, for men. Demonstration Clubs to Meet Here Saturday ommerclal Eanter of Leipzig to recently, it was likely, ti that much emergency traffic--in eluding the shipment of bread--into Berlin had been diverted to routes thru Stettin. The bombing of the port city may therefore' have been nnothe: blow in the battle of-Berlin.

Danes See Raiders Danish broadcasts said hagen anti-aircraft batteries' opened fire as tho planes passed overheat The operation, was the RAF' third big laid i i days of Janu "cry and-the fourth in eight days-a record pace for what normally-! Ihe year's worst period. tbe Stockholm Afton- tldiilngcn reported that and-the important Deiilsche Wei-ke, naval shipyard at Kiel-were almost completely destrbyed-iu yesterday's in air- fieTcls In. other. Industrial targets in western Germany were hard hit. The shipyard built the Luelzow, the 1 battleship Gneisenau and the aircraft carrier Graf Zeppelin.

Wrltttt kr 1111 VOLUME XXXVI--NUMBER 130 THURSDAY, JANUARY GREELEY, COLORADO WEEKLY TRIBUNE ESTABLISHED 1870 Miss Ruth McCammon. of For state home agent, and Mrs iail Lindsay ot Lovelaucl, stnU iresldehl of the Colorado Associa ion Homo Demonstration clubs 111 bo speakers at the fiflli annua necting Weld County Homo Demonstration to be held Sat- day at the Elks dull. Registration will lie from 9:30 to 10 o'clock ami the morning hours will ba devoted to committee ve- wrts, election of officers, and oilier jusiness. Miss McCammon will speak before noori on ''Post-War Claiming for Home Demonstvatioii lubs." Covered dish luncheon will he lield In tlio club building, and tlie Man To Be Tried on Murder Charge ThirteenTears Old (Aftscetatctl Frew) Trinidad, Jim. years after ho is alleged to nave iitally slashed another man at a school house dance, Hex Vernon Win burn will be arraigned on In district court here Monday.

Ou Nov. 2,1930, M. L. Martin died, following a knifo fight. Wiuburn and his two brothers were sought.

"Vern" Wlnburn was apprehended atMedtdrd, In mid-October mid was returned here. Previously one ot his brothers, Fred Winburn, was cleared of charges. A third brother is still sought, Despite the fact 13 years have elapsed since Martin was killed, nearly all of the key state witnesses are still In this area, Ms trict Attorney John N. Mabry said many packers been unabfs to cope with the ihlpmenti, have been pouring Into the twelve prln- clpal livestock terminal! In the corn belt. The wortt congestion In Chicago, largest hog butcher center, where 64,000 pigs squeezed Into the" bulging pens.

Two ctrTnga of unloaded stock can pull away from the unloading pens (above) In Chicago. The supply In Chicago wat the largest 1934. (AP photo.) Hogs and More Hogs, Flight School Opens Sunday At Airport Five Greeley persons will begin flight Instruction at Greeley's llu nictpal airport, three miles eastro town on Ibe Eighth street road atternuou' session, featuring- Mrs. when tho Great Plains Avialion Lindsay's talk, will get underway company gets Its first classes un- at about 2 o'clock. Mary Lou Koehl- derway next Sunday morning.

In er. will also tell of her 4-H trip to connection with the first instruc- Chlcago, won hi a national cloth- tion, an open house is being ob- Ing contest. 'served at the field the entire day There will bo movies shown on and anyone Interested -may. Inspect the "Alaskan Highway," "Ever (acuities there. Since Eve," and "Yesterday, To-' 'Solons Attack Special Session As Waste of Money I Denver, Jan.

C. Four Colorado legislators attacked a proposal to brlug tho primary law before the special legislative assembly tor ro- pe.il this month, asserting that It would be a waste of time and taxpayer's money to "rehash the controversial question." In a Joint statement, Heps. William A. Lewis, Arthur A. Brooks, Earl W.

Mann, and Clifford E. Morgan said repeal of the direct primary issue was "debated and defeated as recently as last March at the regular legislative session." Governor Vivian emphasized yesterday that he had called the session for one purpose to enact extraordinary soldier vote laws -and Indicated reluctance to bring the primary law repeal move before the assembly. The legislature will convene Jan. day and Tomorrow." other aviation enthusiasts are enrolled, and their instruction Germans Murder 1,000 Greeks Cairo, Jan; exiled Greek that the Germans had'-massacred more 1 residents pf Kalavrila aiid destroyed the.historic convents ct Mega Spilcpn and.Agla Tho'-Oi-'eeksi over 12 -years -'old 'ordered, "assembled outside Kalavrlta on to "listen to a which' turned out the of-machine- guns. Later, the GreeVs.

said women and children of the town were compelled to assemble In a. school Yhlch waa set statement said scores died in the panic. Houses then "we're "plundered by coldlers. The convents were said to have been set upon and 1.6 monks were mistreated and thrown Into ravine, the statement said. Belgians Ordered To Stay in Homes Fight Oftens London, Jan.

of the United Nations tha British Brbadcasting'jCoinpany radioed pr.eflnyaslon pleas; to the to remain, In their homes yjie'n military operations get under way. "If you are on the roads, you wl.l 'obstruct i Allied air forces which must free to attack the communications," tire broadcas "If, on-the other ham per th movement of the! Genrans they will'shoot you down ruthlessly Stay In' your homes. anything Is better than the roads." The broadcast further advised the Belgians to slit trenches and to build dugout shelters." Berlin Fires Still Raging Mrs. Andy Baruett of Eaton 1s will begin the following Sunday, ac- presldent ot the county organlza- cording lo present plans, of tion and will preside at the meeting, company's a representative, Other officers are Mrs. George carmel LaTorra of 1714 Eleventh Moslcr, vice president; Mrs.

Lor-l nue, who has completed 35 laine Johnson, Johnstown, secre-; our3 of flying In Denver and is lary; Mrs. John Bothell, awaiting her call to tho ferry treasurer. I command, which is slated to come Committees In charge of the all: thru In April. She will continue her clay session i flight training at Swcetwatcr, Tex. Delta Homo Demonstration and Miss LaTprra.will be at tho field Delta (J.R.D.

clubs, registration; i alli.dny to explain instructional Glicrest Circle, exhibits; Greeley courses to those who call, and also Better Homcmakers, program; Gill' present will be Major .1. W. Eumont W.T.I*, and the. Big Bend club, a hd Captain Jack Rutledgo-ot the Baihesvllle' Three Colorado State: Guard, president table decorations; Mil liken -Homo an vico president, respectively, of Demonstration club, fat salvage! Plains Aviatlon.cohipany the meeting of Denver, of the wqraon-enrolled al the school are anticipating.service, with tho II. S.

ferry while the other fiva enrollees will work toward private Each requires a minimum pf 35 flying hours and eight hours of dual flight. Anyone may enroll for these Two '65-horge- power Aeronca Chiefs, will be at the field-for training purposes Sun- are reminded to take waste fata, Germans Make Another Stand On Old Polish Frontier While Nazis in Dnieper Face Trap Left Flank Protected By Marshes in Better Defense Positions Yanks Pushing Battle To Take Britain (Associated Press) By land and by air, Allied forces stopped up the. pressure today.In the campaign to remove 300-mile long New Britain as the key Japanese base in the southwest Pacific. While U. S.

marines routed enemy remnants In the Borgen Bay u-'ea on' the'-island's western tip, warplanes from the South Pacific lew In again to the northeastern j. extremity continue' the a i 1 1 sweeps'-designed to knock out Ra- baul, the battered center, of Japanese Btre'tigth on New 'That "-Rabaul can--and'; will--be bombed into both as an air aud shipping base, tire confident declaration of Marine Maj. Ralph New Britain, whose Solomons air force neutralized the Nipponese air Army Control Of Railroads May Be Ended By JOSEPH A. LOFTUS Washington, Jan. railroad bperatuig still holding "at'the carriers a i consider basic wages frozen for the fields on Invaded Bougainville.

Altho the Japanese have lost more than 160 planes in defense of Rabaul in the two weeks alone. Gen. Mitchell said tho- all- duration ot the war by President Roosevelt's governing two other brotherhoods. This development, plus the appointment of a special presidential board to consider the non-operating out air offensive against.the enemy re vived hopes of an early set- stronghold has "barely started yet. tlement Mch wou i pefhm an end But, he added, It won't: be long contro i the nation's rail Prltoner Italian prisoner of war Identified as Pasqiiale Maculll, was apprehended Several hours after he de- sorted detail'-' five miles south of 'Albuquerque jfestefdajr, A.

Boyce 1 for the El. the reported. He was 0 Albuquerque, Weather (AiiocUtcd Trail Stockholm, Jan. 6. Fires still burned In Berlin at 4 p.m.

Wednesday from the RAP'S heavy Monday raid, and thousands ot evacuees, carrying their meager belongings, jammed trains and highways out of the city, the newspaper -Aftontld- nlngen said today. Food shortages have developed In many sections of the battered capital. Three hundred persons, wera reported to have been extricated from an air raid shelter beneath Hitler's damaged Reich Chancelery after they had been trapped for 30 hours. Local for 24 hours 'ending "a.m. Thursday: high.

38, low 4 (9 a.m. Wednesday). road system. The carriers' position In the con troversy was to be presented today to' committees and general chair men summoned to Washington by chief of-the three operating unions firemen and switch men--to determine a course of ac I -These three groups have ex pressed apprehension of a "freeze' even If the! government's genera wage policy should be changed, and this fear" has deterred them, from accepting arbitration or the term! of the president's arbitration award to the trainmen and the engineers Tbe carriers have urged that th award be applied to all five group a week's pal home expenses, vacation. Tho five cent Increase and th By HENRY C.

CASSIDY Moscow, Jan. G. The German army of Field Frllz Von Mannslein has retreated Into the Pripot-marshes and reformed for another stand pre-war Polish frontier west and; south of customs station which the Soviet captured Monday. This stiffened resistance the main 'route from -Warsaw develo'ped "as the' massive of rriiy swept.BOtithwa'rd.toward the iniester the'prerwar Ru'man an border, nl paco ollowlng the' capture-'of liev, a pivotal rail center 25 miles outh of fakes Defense Positions. that 'on Mannsteia.had (alien up "posi- ions favorable for defense with his eft fiank'protecte'd by.the marshes nd was making a determined stand west pf Olevsk clong.tlre railway eading to Kowel, a city ,130.

miles nslde the former Polish border, ind also in the region" southward jet ween Volyriskl. Capture pf the latter own, less tlia'n 20 miles from the ire-war-'border, was 'announced to- lay. After his own forces had retreated across to their present positions, he Nazi commander had an opportunity to destroy over wo tricky water, barriers In this area--the Ubort- river which flows ust west of 'Olevsk and the Sluch river wlficb swings In a northwest- ernly "direction from Novogorod' Volynski. Break Rlvei- Defenses A dispatch to the Moscow News, English language weekly, said the Reds Bad broken "thru the German" Sluch. reports had placed the Russians" aiross the pre-war Polish border In the area between Olevsk and Sarny.

a town of 35 miles In- Side the old frontier. It was evident that growing battle was in progress in this sector and that the Russians were bringing new pressure" aaglnst tire Germans In the Dnieper, bend south ward as well as 'conducting a large scale offensive" northward around Nevel. i (The German communique broad cast by Berlin today sald.heavy bat ties are In full swing, northwest of Berdlchev where life have attacked "with unabated violence." Attacks. Returned (The- Germans also said th'at the Russians had resumed attacks north of Krivol Rog and east of Klrovograd, and" had renewed attempts to break thru east and northwest of Vitebsk.) Tho Russians' drlvo southward five-day siege gave Gen. N'ikolnl Va- tulln's soullrern wing tho green light to speed up Its march to the Dniester river, whore the Germans n-ero said to bo rushing new defense fortifications.

Capture of Berdlchev won a special order ot the day from Premier Stalin, and 224 guns fired a 20-salvq salute to tho victory nt 1 a. m. today. (Auaclited Trrss) Bern Jan. Germau press, apparently realizing that it Is not conceal Na.zl'poslllou oil tho Rus clan front, revealed the! German people' today the situation there IB "very critical," -Tbe oMhe Tribune De'Gpueve wrote tliat iN'az propaganda Is gradually attempting to orient public to tho German army's're'lre'a't.

circles have announced to the Germans that all necessarj measures have been laken to "mod erale thejlusslan advance," but the Tribune correspondent said a 1 Germans failed now "they risked to lose all tho territory gained lu tho bloo'dy fighting" since 1941--tha most pointed referenci to come from Germany thus far on he seriousness of the present bat ties. Reds Sponsor Poles Taking German Land Jan. ncwspape 'Pr'efree Poland" called for pos war expansion ot- Poland to lh west to provide a "strategic strong hold against the Prussians. 1 In an article published yesterday insisted tha Poland must have a democrat: government which would llquidat 'all remnants fossilized pollllca and economic (Altno the dispatch 1 did not rnak clear the affiliation of this public tion, may be the organ ot a Ku sian-sponsored Polish organlzatlo In The -statement' appa ently Implied that post-war Polan should annex sections of German or East Prussia.) War Bulletins Yanks Launch Heavy Attack On Italy Front Allied Headquarters, A i Jan. ii.

Mud-caked A a i i troops, opening a long-awaited Fifth army offensive with British troops on a 10-mile front in driving Lend Aid Cost 18.6 Billions Takes 13.5 Cents of Each Dollar U. S. Is Expending Upon War Prosecution (Associated Press) London, Jan. 50 Allied merchantmen have left Gibraltar along with a cruiser, destroyers and corvettes, the German DNB agency asserted today. London, Jan.

6. A Tokyo broadcast heard today by Reuters said "our forces in New Britain now are Inferior to enemy forces which have landed on the island." American troops are steadily pushing Inland after winning Uvo bridgeheads on the western end of this island. At the opposite end Is the Important Japanese base of Rabaol. sleet and rain, have smashed and battered their way Inside the pillbox maze of San Vlltore where they (Associated Press) Washington, Jan. in a report placing total lend-loose aid ti America's Allies al thru Nov.

30, declarer! today tliat 1914 "will a year cf decisive actions In the He declared the United Nations had Increased their powers to defeat the Axis and had "beaten back our enemies on every front." Plan Offensives Al Allied war councils at Teheran and Cairo few weeks ago, the president said, plans were macla for major offensives which will sliced victory. 'With the closer unity, there achieved," lie asserted, "we shall bo able to strike ever Increasing blows until the unconditional surrender of the Nazis and Japanese." He credited lend-lease with lit- creasing the power of Allied offensives, emphasizing tremendous Increases in shipments ot munitions. It was his thirteenth report on Icnd-lcaso since the program began In March, 1041, and it was transmitted lo the secretary of the" senate and clsrk of the house. Begins Decline Up lo the ond of Nore.ra.ber, tho program, was described as "an essential element of United Nations strategy," took 13.5 cents out ot every dollar of American war expenditures. Altlio the first 11 months ol 1043 accounted for of the total of leud-lease aid, compared with 57,003,000,000 in all of.

1942, a table In the-renort showed that tha flow had been lessening every are fighting the Germans hand-to-, mo Ml sjlice a a was reached hand for possession of the remaining half of the town, Allied head- miarlcrs announced today. Tire American and British ground forces, supported by wave upon wave of American invader dive- bombers which twisted thru low- a i clouds to lay salvos of bombs on the enemy's gun positions, advanced an average ot Ing the night was at 4 o'clock by Jamea F. Byrnes, Thursday mbrnlng, when the 'mer- tion director. cury dipped to 8 degrees, raising The practical effect Is Shinty to 18 above tero at 8 a.m. five-cent raise, ho Recorders there fouriu'thls slightly Just like the 'our cents irregular, the low reading of the earlUr by an erne gay board wUh honzont day" usually coming with sua-up at around 8 o'clock.

Colorado-- Partly cloudy today, tonight and Friday; show In west portion and In mountains today and tonight, and In mountains an mediately east tonight and Friday; colder east portion Friday, i Partly cloudy to cloudy today, tonight and Friday; snow west and north portions today no changes In existing overtime rules and practices. The theoretical effect Is that the employes thereby receive the ot the 40 hour week, to which- they aro not subject by law. Miller Resign! Denver, Jan, of Leslie A. Miller, regional director and over most of entire of the War Production Board and night and early Friday; colder to- former governor of Wyoming, was and tonight southeast por- announced today. It ef- tlon Friday.

January II. picked up momentum as tho result if the capture of Berdlchev and a dispatch to Izvestla reported fierce fighting In tha villages along the highway to Vennitsa, an Important rail center on the Bug river." Another objective of the Red army was Zb-ermlnka, 20 miles beyond on the Odess-Lwow railway. There was every Indication that tho Germans had fortified both places and would make a desperate effort to hold them. Beyond Tarascha, south of Kiev, the Soviet closed in on a 35-mile corridor which the Germans hold between Kanev the region" around Smela of Cherkasy. Reports said tho Germans' upper defense Una to their positions in tire Dnieper bend wai rapidly crum- ofs'patches said little about the Baltic army's operation north of Neyel beyond the fact that it was a large scale operation and assuming more Importance dally.

of Berdlcher bloody Washington, Jan. an the Polish government-in-exile today appeared" farther apart than, ever in their territorial dispute- settlement of which might speed the route of German armies. Tire breach, which gives added Importance to the forthcoming visit here of Polish Premier Stanislaw Mlkolajczyk, stem's from tho Lon- donbased Polish government's co.n- that Russia, should have- junranleed pre-war Poland's terrl- Integrity beforo her troops the Germans'across the old Polish boundary That, 1n effect, was a restatement of the government's unrelenting position that tha territory belongs to Poland. Moscow has been equally Insistent that the contested territories are integral parts of White Russia London; Jan." Berlin ra- 'did broadcast a dispatch today by DNB, German official news agency, from Tokyo, that Australian' troops had made'a new land- Ing at Cape Gumbl on the north coast of New Guinea, London, 'Jan. of "Marshal Joslp' Broz' (Tito) Yugoslav army of liberation announced today his forces were steadily'driving the enemy Banja Luka as the sixth day of bitter street fighting raged in that Croatian base of the second German tank army.

London, Jan. formations of RAF light bombers and fighter-bombers again attacked military objectives In northern France this morning, it was officially announced. London, Jan. units of the British First and American Seventh are concentrating at Bart on the Italian east coast for an Invasion of the Balkans, according to reports received in Switzerland from Zaa- reb, Croatia, a Reuters-dispatch from Zurich said today. WFA Denies Food Spoilage Losses (Aiaocficed Tress) Washington.

Jan. War Food Administration, reporting ou its holdings of food for lend-lease, emergency and other export purposes, said today its losses Irom spoilage had amounted to of one percent ot total purchases between March, 1841, and Dec. 1, 1943. Those louses, It said, were equivalent to than on every $5,000 of purchases. Tlie period covered tho life of lend-leaae oper-.

atlons. The WFA food report was Issued Iri the published reports that the agency had suffered large losses thru and that it lield excess supplies. I Nazis Use New Type Air Bomb London, Jan. airmen attacking Kiel a knifed thru strong defenses which Included rochet planes and lighters towing what appeared to be new typo antt-alrcraft bombs. It -was Ihe first time this weapon had been reported in use.

Returning filers said the bombs were about the size ot 100-pounders and were towed on 40 or 50 feet of cable. One American airman said he saw a bomb-towing twin-engined Messerschmltt streak thru Ms formation and the bomb exploded with mile iu the first day of their otfen- Eivo on the 10-mile front, headquarters said. Tho advance was on a front five miles wide on either side of theYii Casillna, the main road to Cassino and Rome. The British surged forward In tho five mile southern half of the sectpr from rolnt.wee't of'Rocca, while the Americans swept- down from the heights nroiind San Vittore on the north aide ot tho road west ot Venafro. 1,1.

Gen. Mark W. Clark's offensive which broke weeks of minor activity along tho Italian front started under dripping, wind-swept skies Tuesday-night. San Vittore, six miles from EJas- slno, had been converted into a fortress with every house a pillbox and with tho Germans dug Into winecellars where tho terrific 1 altering of Allied artillery could not reach them. Tire entire town was a system of fortifications and tank traps.

But by noon Wednesday the Americans had driven thru the outer defenses and taken halt the town. Violent hand-to-hand conflict was taking place for the oilier half. Dispatches from the front said the Germans opened up the fiercest artillery and mortar fire in many weeks as the British and Americans rose front thalr positions and began heir offensive. "The Germans are fighting bitterly for every Inch ot ground In their customary style, but have been driven back at least a mile In most places," a military spokesman Allied difficulties were increased by rain which swelled the watercourses again, by snow In the nountalns and by sleet which threw a clammy blanket on expected air But despite tho hazards tho American A-36 Invaders roared In under the clouds, skipping Just August. A considerable part of the report apparently- was designed to answer criticism--some of it by members of a globe-circling committee of five senators who visited major war theaters.

One section, for Instance, complete with reproductions of labels, hammered at the theme that lend- lease items are well marked to show they originated in the U. S. A. Some critics had said that the British were redistributing a goods uuder llielr own labels. Mock Air Battle in South Colorado (Associated Picssl.

'-f Pueblo, Jan. fighter, planes Intercepted a fleet about 75 Liberator heavy bombers Pueblo around noon today 111 the first phase of a mock attack" arranged by the sccor air- force headquarters in Colorado Springs. Busy Fuebloans streamed from offices and the schoolrooms to watch the air battle about 5.000 feet overhead. About 25 fighter craft darted like mosquitoes, one observer reported, around, tha bombers which bad appeared from the south on their way towards tho objective. lustead of bullets camera! -were ara weapons used.

The heavier ships, protected by a smoke screen, were flying Iu two groups, one slightly from the fighters, apparently.noti- fied of the "enemy's" approach, swarmed down from the north. Despite the opposition, the bombers continued towards Colorado Springs'. Most of the Pueblo schools, had been dismissed. Tho others, however, Immediately staged fire drills. (JUaCKiltwi Fiets) Colorado Springs, Jan.

than a hundred bombers--. Liberators, Flying Fortresses and the new mighty B-29S--roared over at noon today as the air forte command staged a and "defense" over the headquarters of tho second air force. Flying I i formations, tha bombers executed their mission at above the- ground, at 300 miles an an altitude of about 20,000 feet, wn a elow, streets were crowded hour to. strafe a bomb enemy's emplacements. the Mrs.

Anna Rust Dies in Denver Denver, Jan. Anna Rust, a resident of Greeley for 38 yea'ra, died yesterday In Denver nt the home of her daughter, Mrs. Leta B. Copcland. She was 96.

Mrs. Huat had lived 1n Denver for the past five years. She came to Colorado in 1SSO from Aurora; Ind. She 1s survived by her Denver daughter and one granddaughter, three grandsons ond several great grandchildren. Miss Grace II.

Eaine Dies Here Wednesday with spectators craning their.necfcl to see the "air battle." In and out among the huge bombing ships slngle-englned fighters, their terrific speed empha- rlzed by the slower pace of the blf craft. Denver Woman Killed and the western Ukraine. This altitude received Its latest expression yesterday In an editorial In Pravda, Communist party organ, which declared that questions regarding Polish and other territories In which Russia Is. Interested aro domestic Russian questions hot subject to interference by outsiders. Curriers Built 'rtu) New York.

Jan. shipyards built 65 alroraft carriers of all types In 1913, Jambs For- rcatal, undersecretary of disclosed today. a white puff of smoke Just over ft Flying Fortress. Roosevelt Still 111 (AMOOtttJ PltJl) Washington, Jan. 6.

President Roosevelt, still trying to shake off tho effects of the grippe, remained in his White House quarters again today and continued work on his annual message to congress. Club Woman Diet (AssoeUtul Press) Denver, Jan. 6. Mrs. Llonna Jeancon, 67, an officer In numerous Denver, Jan.

Denver resident was killed and another Injured seriously early today when jn automobile overturned four miles south of Larkspur. Killed Marian Burkhart, passenger In an antomobile driven by Joseph Driscoll who was hurl Jap Internees Co on Strike Colorado women's clubs, died yesterday In Denver following ness ot several months. Miss Grace II. Ralne, 84, died Wednesday evening at 7 p.m. at the home of her sister, Mrs.

E. B. Foote, east of Greeley. Miss Ralne, borri at Crownpolnf, N. had lived in the Oreeley district 22 years.

Survivors Include: a sister, Mrs. E. B. Footo of east of Oreeley; nephews, Arthur R. Johnson and Herbert L.

I'oolo of Greeley, Sgt. Howard H. Foote of Camp Bowie, Robert S. Footo ot Los Angeles, and nieces, Mrs. Frank Autry and Mrs.

Ray Drinkwater of Denver and Mrs. E. S. Foote of Los Angeles, Calif. Funeral services will ba held Saturday afternoon, 2.o'clock from 111- i Macys drawing room.

will boat Linn Grove, Intcrmen! Hunt, Idaho, Jan. hot water heating hollers remained cold today as 100 Japanese-evacuee boilermen and janitors nt the Mlnidoka relocation center refused to accede to revised work schedules. Lack of hot water caused coal haulers and garbage crews--also Japanese evacuees--to leave their jobs. They said they wouldn't work unless they had hot water with which to wash. John Btgclow, center reports officer, said the boilermen and janitors refused to work yesterday after their schedules had been changed so they could, work eight-hour day? Instead of sevei days of 64 hours each..

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About Greeley Daily Tribune Archive

Pages Available:
251,094
Years Available:
1916-1977