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The Brooklyn Daily Eagle from Brooklyn, New York • Page 2

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to BROOKLYN EAGLE, FRT DEC 1944 PRIVATE LIVES ll MA IflP mim By Paul Ford Aides Run a War by Phone cut OUTPUT OF FOREIGN POLICY 1 PROBLEMS SEEN BY GIDEONSE turned to see a tank about 1.500 a killy dilly! It kissed that deeply, especially around the By VIRGIL PINKLEV rtv rnmmanii Pnst of Com-iiorv smokestack right on the nose. eyes, which showed lack of sleep PLANE PARTS yards away burst into a red flash and then become enveloped by orange and black flames. bat Teams IIS Miles Inside Ger- BrK-ks are falling everywhere. Ro- Collier is one of the few men alive Nov. 30 (Delayed) (U.ra ger." who had a German 88 shell pass He went on flt.umbllM Inside a tiny dark base- s-rnd railed For i between his legs.

Going back into the basement Detroit. Dee. 1 (U.R Three major I heard Power say: strikes sharply curtailed production Air reports two tanks ln flames. jof aircraft assemblies and engines That 3 half of them." and the thinning supply of ment room Just about large enough Another telephone rang. Col.

John, hnirf a kitchen stove and an imn i "Our men- attacking Objective our refrigerator. I heard the; coo-mI's tense voke: nlcn no Deln Three minutes later the other threatened production at still The principle of the separation of governmental powers, imbedded in the Constitution, has made us an "irrespdhsible government" ln international relations, Harry Gideonse, president of Brooklyn College, charged yesterday at tha Brooklyn Academy of Music. It waa tha filth lecture in a series on "Democracy ln America." Gideonse pointed out that ln ar outer plants. Ignoring pleas by union leaders, "Ail aet. Here we go.

Roger." delivered. two were report 1 afire, eliminating Far off a big gun fired, opening! Colonel Collier, Stonewall Three. (A serenade means every piece of i that danger which might have been the midday battle designed to cap-You nt "rena.de on objective artillry which a corps possesses turned into counterattack, ture Barmen and Koslar, the outer between the church may fire simultaneously on a small i Drawing hard on a cigarette, Hanks protecting Julich. You say air should crack that Umited objective. Collier reported to the general: nearly 10,000 rank-and-file members of the United Automobile Workers (C.

I. refused to end work stoppages for the third day at the B-29 riving at an agreement at the end nearbrl05's tptt 33-pound shells "Pour Tiger tanks are coming Gene, Peed at a of two each minute for next mortars aie dug in. idown tne rotd gru you want h(lpr. Yes, sir. Objectives 5, 6.

7. 8, 10 of the war "our representative not and 11 are taken. We are closing in on objectives 4, I and 12 now and should have them within an hour. every na. "ere ln "'said Maj.

James a. rower, an ac- Off to the right Long Tom 155 neath a battered destroyed German. countant graduate of Texas A. added their might with round after house, the ar was being run with a and M. Power called for air sup-round of 95-pound projectiles crash- colonel, major and three captains; an(j then rang back the corn-ins into German strongholds five signals all along the line as pany commander.

Superfortress department of Chrysler Corporation Dodge main plant, Brlggs Manufacturing Company Mack plant and Graham-Paige Motor Corporation. The Dodge strike of 1.300 employes curtailed output of B-29 engine parts here and 200 quit work at the sprawling Dodge plant at Chicago. only will have the trouble of get- ting the agreement of SO other nations he will have to get agreement from innumerable branches of his own government, beginning1 with) Congress." Already our men have reached the 'square at Barmen. Yes, I told the Jack-Rabbit to Dull up its tail and to ten miles distant. Barmen as being stormed and cap- Major Power speaking.

Air sup- T.i.nhmK JomD lmi 11 anead of port to handle those tanks is up- TOOK HIS lb ff rJ'lMi OWP TXAAAG -xL xjp- Jwmg in75oC" 'Supreme Gourr. JST is Jce lxjgiasX 2SVr 1, DJ Vavic orH A world which saw what we did Hnw rimerenf. Tn Tnrw eariv iu uiu.T stairs now. we are swucnine pianes The walls of the basement shook. vrth AfrU.

UQ Black Wolves. where part are assembled into the to Wood row Wilson can't have much 2 3no-horenower engine and telephones atop ubles i The colonel turned to his aides respect lor our word," he warned. niitu nun, du uu Illjl LB rv Vlfl. LIICII1 UI1L.CI UUBr.tl- Pnupr Smnpvil! Three and said the general was highly officials said that stoppage may He pointed out that because many trie value oi security, aui tion and TD's itank destroyers) are government branches have Jealously guarded independent powers it might, for instance, prove impos code name) speaking. Roger." it with in on them from the pl'ased' if flow of materials is not re-1 riid a short -cropped of that one'S Collier then called infantry com- SUmed from the Detroit plant, iiender Texan with at least three atcnfs the Ameritan progress.

As headquarters in a German, All three strikes Involved seniority davs' beard. He reminded one of a Ule Germani anti japs we 1nK dugout taken only a few hours provisions contained in U. A. modern Daniel Boone. nave manv arml wnicn I rushed out atop plit of niWle contracts.

"Okay, Bob," the major continued ur.Lson of Mont- whlch Germans held less than; "Thats right. he The unions executive board, In sible to settle such an important matter as lend-lease. The Chief Executive may make the nq rod 'That's fine Yes, air knows where famous 8th rmv in the ''6ht hurs 'rlier and saw sending in tanks to blast each session at Cleveland when informed your men are. They are laying them desert' and tl-e c-rack Russian and clouds of green and blue-black basement. Have your boys set the seriousness of the three walk-in within 200 yards of your outfit German outfits smoke billowing up and explosions 'grenade and bayonet those Germans outs, wired local officials to take the Roger." poppi.ig off as P-47 Thunderbolt or pull them out by the heels with 'necessary action to halt the viola-Back came a voice saying: Mn Air Support fighter-bombers still were dlve-ltheir bare fists.

But clear them jtions of union policy. Their orders, "Yes. sir, but we would like to see "Colonel Collier speaking." con- bombing nearby targets. 'out. We want only dead or cap- as well as War Labor Board appeals an agreement as to terms of repayment," he said, "but the agreement might be nullified by the tariff policy of Congress.

The debtor nation obviously could not make repayment If high tariffs prevent it from trading with us." those guys np there. Even if the tinued this small, dark -com- Suddenly I heard a big explo-tured Huns, but no basement for resumption of all operations "for bombs get closer, we'll take it. That plexioned officer, whose face was siou from another and national security, had little enect. Japs' China Strength Put at 2,000,000 Men 4 "I 4 i Meanwhile, with no relation to the strikes, 125,000 Fqrd Motor Car; Company employes were laid offj until Monday when River Lincoln, Highland Park. Willow Run Green Re-elected, Plans Wage Fight 1 Yanks Open Fight For Reich Plants Continued from Page 1 bomber and Reveral feeder plants Washington.

Dec. 1 (U.PJ The tre- i will reopen after a company-ordered mendoU(l American inventory. forces in the Far East was outlined by the Office of War Information two growing American penetrations of the Reich short of the Rhine regardless of cost. The 3d Army was facing a belt of Siegfried Line Mackenzie King Asks Full Debate On Conscript Order Ottawa. Dec.

1 Prime Minister Mackenzie King called for full parliamentary debate today on all angles of his order-in-council to conscript Canadian youth for overseas combat duty. Rejecting a suggestion that House of Commons debate on the issue be soldiers without seriously affecting war-production manpower reserve. This figure does not Include the added millions who might be 'recruited' from subject nations." Blasting' the notion that the Japanese soldier Is a "stupid, insensate peasant," OWI said it was the opinion of army officials that the average enemy troop is a "good fighting man," although many are likely to "go to pieces" when the today ln a report estimating that Japan already has 4,000,000 men ln the field and can easily muster another 2.000,000. Japanese strength in China alone was placed at 2.000,000 troops, Indicating the minimum number of Allied soldiers that may be needed Nab Flying Major In Theft of Jewels Maj. Dean Ivan Lamb, 48, of 310 E.

44th Manhattan, former army major wiUi the flying forces In Burma, is in jail today charged with stealing jewels valued at Assistant District Attorney Francis S. Parks said Lamb gained possession of the gems by representing himself to Gaesoi Lall, a dealer he met ln Burma, as an American collector. all Daua a a New Orleans, Dee. 1 (U.R) Williani Green began ills 31st year as president of the American Federation of Labor today, pledging himself to meet the problems of labor, including modification of the Little Steel formula. The convention, which ended yesterday following unanimous re-election of Green and all other officers, named Green to a committee to tak the War Labor Board's decision uphold the Little Steel formula directly to President Roosevelt.

Before disbanding yesterday, the membership voted to call a world trade union conference of the fre trade unions at the earliest possible time. This followed a flat refusal of the A. F. L. to attend tha forthcoming British Trade Union Congress in London to which both the C.

I. O. and the Soviet trada unions have accepted Invitations. in that theater alone after Ger- 'going is rough, many Is defeated. Overall Japanese dead since the Since Pearl Harbor, OWI saidjoutbreak of the Sino-Japanese War U.S.

tropps have killed at least estimated at 850,000. 000 Japanese at a cost of 21.000; The report gave this picture of defenses 10 miles deep behind both IMerzlg and 11 miles to the southeast. German resistance also stiffened in narrowing eastern pockets of eastern France still in enemy hands, but the American 7th, French 1st and eiements of the 3d Army hacked out limited gains. Qst 7th Army column was onljH5ne to two miles from HagueirffuT key to the remaining enemy communications north of Strasbourg. A Swiss dispatch said French troops also virtually completed the liquidation of the last German curtailed to hasten a vote of conn- 1 dence in his government, King said American dead better than 13 to 1.

the typical Japanese soldier: He is five feet three Inches tall he wouia not attempt to lninnge -JS But with at least 4,000,000 still under arms, Japan is far from any desperate manpower problem, OWI said ln a detailed report based on Ute parliamentary rights ol mem bers. Conseouentlv. dozens of French' and weighs 1174 pounds. (The average American GI is about five feet eight inches tall and weighs 145 pounds.) If he is a second class private the lowest rank he is paid 1.38 to $2.07 a month. (Top Jap generals are paid $126.50 a month.) bridgehead west of the Rhine south speaking liberals were expectet.

to get on record today disapproving tract nf Ta1 fr-f TilfU tha nnnnrvoHnn vi, Ui nwT mrll th nf Hweninone h. Swl fLA Ml the foer Officer Ls Said to the conscription measure but supporting King's leadership. The confidence vote, predicted earlier as War Department says the Japanese can equip and train 2,000,000 more n' Ravi I convinced the attorney he was city o. Ba.ei. Micrue uccrt akCU outwit u.u forthcoming today, may be delayed.

Town of Lindern Taken ac; of jewels to their owner. The law- In the roaring battle of the JosePh "arr or said he gave Lamb the jewels IJt WW It still was possible, however, that a motion would be offered keep iVia VIamr in vuinn nver the week Uogne plain. Lt. Gen. William Hllthaca tlmhurst, former in 1943.

Right on His Doorstep Latrobe, Pa. (U.R Here I man who found the legendary "acres of diamonds" in his own backyard, Charles C. Wedemeyer came horn from a day of fruitless hunting, Simpsons 9th Army forces cleared Pprmif Bureau hpod When Ques''oneo by Parks, Umb Lindern, two miles northwest ofVueens permit Bureau rieaa, said he had sent the gems Crippled Raider Dares Death for 1,500 Miles end to clean up the conscription controversy and terminate the ses 4 Linnich, and Welz, one mile is home. He took command otjpackage, with other personal ef-S'Jthe 165th Infantry when Col. lVt TioTZ As the dominion-splitting conscrip li sji hold nn the west hank nf the RneriJ.

Gardiner Conroy was killed Ing. Mrs. Roebatlgh admitted to anly to find a ringneck pheasant lying on his back porch. The bird had been killed when it flew into the screen door and broke its neck. gine started going out and finally police receiving a package from settled down at half power.

We1 as far south as a point east of Alt-I(jn Aakin Island. tion fight tapered off in Parliament, reports from western Canada lndi- cated that home defense troops who jj' had demonstrated against the draft were resigned to more orderly pro- L. By MAC R. JOHNSON Salpan, Dec. 1 (UR) One Superfortress returned from the strike on Tokyo yesterday on "two and a half engines," after a wild Lamb but said there were no Jewels in it.

started losing altitude fast at 1,000 feet per minute aori. ine east Dame iortress oi Julirh, six mile southeast of Linnich. already was under American artillery fire. Germans Admit Retreat test, ln the form of written griev- ancea submitted to Ottawa. wmmt i LANE BRYANT BROOKLYN Red Chief Opens Drive for Political Jr I mile night flight that threatened to i mvc I 1 1 Vic 3 iiuuilUI end at any moment in a crash land i Ai Despite criticism in Commons.

King's government was believed se-, SALVAGED TREASURE ing at sea. The pilot, Capt. Bernard J. Mul-loy, ordered all unnecessary equipment thrown out through the bomb bay. Flak suits and helmets went overboard and the crew fired off all their ammunition to lighten the ship.

A German D. N. B. dispatch mm Date, Longs for I The bomber's roubles started over stands with acknowledged that Nazi lines had VOntrOl Of rrQnCe cure, ana tne army was preparingi Viii rv.rrh nlrl to extend the training 16.000 Do-illfHe Uurcn 9irl Tokyo itself, when the pilot took hun- bQCk t0 rUinCd church y.VrtnTe.trtSch been "pressed back several Communist Party Leader MauHcej White HOUSO VlSlt heudso Thorez. making his first public ap- nim, rlurrhinn two statuettes she a larue-scale American attack.

ppan theater. Inpmance frnm an enfnrrivt siv-vonr1 Lui. raiiuu found in the debris as she' uAlr reconnaissance indicated that 'exile in Moscow called on all French tuclec' two wedding rings One engine cut out suddenly as They wallowed along after that at low air speed, barely 600 to 800 feet over the water, until they I the Germans were strengthening in his pocket and his bride-to-be, in a -Rogers Peel- they broke through the overcast and ice began to form on the ship. "We dumped our bombs on Tokyo nnH rlimhpri 2 000 fpet. nn three en- watcnes tsrmsn troops marcn their positions all along the east; i Actress Fave Emerson, hurriedly col- thmunh her villoae in oursuit bank of the Row.

di8ul ln gen-imlht: yndlct lected a trousseau today for their through her village in pursuit, aIong a Une parmllellnK jyive the Communists political con-marriage and nonemoon that sighted Salpan. Even then they didn't think they could make it One of the two good engines coughed Just before the landing, but thev brought the bomber down. I or tne Germans. railroad skirting the river itself. lroi oi tne country.

Imight include a visit to the White igiues," recalled Second Lt. William On the 9th Army's southern1 Thorez addressed an enthusiastic House- jH. Criswell, co-pilot, flank, Lt. Gen. Courtney H.

Hodges', ''lalhvlAorl The Resident's second son and Threw Equipment Into Sea 1st Army fought with tanks, flamei'0' Miss Emerson continued to keep the, "We went alone for over 600 miles "We couldn't wet the end of a stick with the gasoline we had left," Criswell said. throwers and tommy guns in an effort to clear the Germans from Warner Bros. Quit Hays' Organization proclaimed mpai to estab.ish ee engines, when another en-Communist-controlled government. cret Accepting the socialist party's bid, Miss Emerson oWa- a two. Marines Beat Army Vets vacalion inm studio, Blind Men's River Race mJA the ruins of Lamersdorf and Inden five miles northwest of Duren.

Fierce Street Battles Guerrilla Bands Stir Trouble in Athens Athens, Dec. 1 (U.R) Armed police Hollywood, Dec. 1 (U.R) In the first revolt by a major against The m.ri, i.m..., "warner ros ana said sue was Philarinlnhlo nee (IIP1 A crew ttlao i0 mine in uie synaicaie. looking forward to meeting DUnd marines. all of whom lost! Dana marines, an oi wiioui and Partisan troops patroled the uu wwj 'o the so-called "Hays office," yesterday, were driven out hi-1 Tl.nr7 frim-o thaf tii imiij iwauu DartrL of Athens today as Greek nfTh.

9 lmnf rowing victory over a crew of i government leaders and representa-ns ernes of the 200 families who de- The meeting with fntnr d.h.o- f.n,c stndirv tv1v withdrew from a counterattack, and then smashed ed the Association of Motion Picture 1 tne Association or Motion hrij 'liverorf t.h. rn.mi it u. veieiaiu num wic i wt conferred on ways and means oi JntZy of-ennihandTtaVT and who siU ss'sa although 1ZV America and nrenared to v.u.m.ucM mu, annougn sue Knows. Rowing over the half-mile course disarming and disbanding tne ml it, own labor problems. inaen ana seem to wieia power colonel Roosevelt's brother, Jimmy ion the Schuylkill River yesterday, I guerrilla bands, as requested by AI- The withdrawal climaxed long' Some three and a half miles west! Tnorez, who fled to Moscow inj Where we go depends on how the rival oarsmen all were blind and lied authorities, months of bickering between the of other 1st Army troops 1939 avid a prison sentence for, much time Elliott has off from his oniy tne COXswains and tillers who Observers feared that an armed in I desertion from the French armv nrmv rfntipe ch- eol i uesertion irom the French army, army duties," she said.

"How long, mided them throueh the chomiv! clash between Rightist and Leftist studio and the organization whicn "uc" was granted amnesty recently by we stay depends on that, too." cnnitMiMinns mieht tvnir if a mmnrn. I. fomlliorlv knnwn under the name Jur meroae. A oerman trans- Gen. Charles De Gaulle.

The ceremony will be a double 'the army an early lead and then mise is not reached shortly, al- of its director. Will H. Havs. 0fea" dispatch said the American I Hinting that the studio felt the 3d and 9tl Infantry Divisioas Miss Emerson dis- ring service. closed.

association 'hadn't been quite fair were fighting at Merode in an effort 1 of Warner Bros. to blealt through to Duren. JOll null VJlMIGG in its review iew came through with a late rush to though there was no disposition to win by a quarter length, crossing! regard the situation as hopeless. the line with a 28 beat, Kwelchow Province, China, will Building construction in Sweden son have 14 Irrigation canal sys-increased 40 percent last year. I soon have 14 Irrigation canal systems.

WHE.V OUT OF TOWN REGISTER FROM BROOKLYN "Vnii'ro niii'to ficrrit sweater girls and the like, the' Patton's army came under Its: a IUU IK quite I 11 sgid tnere nsd bfPn dlffer. heaviest artillery fire of the war as AQClin Oil AttCICK Santa, the Ropers Feet ences nr. what is good taste and it pushed through to the Saar River lahol rlnps arlfl distinrtion what Big guns of the Siegfried Line rang-1 At UOrSeV PattV laOd ClOeS acid (llslincuon Howevpri stlldi0 spokesmen said ing up to 170 millimeters were rain-1 to VOUr Sfift without the principal difficulty was in theUng shells on the advancing Hollywood, Dec. 1 U.R) Jon Hall 1 1 i 1 unnumiK u. oe mows Bridge returned to the witness stand today added cost to you." 1 negouauons.

I As for "what is good taste." the studio said it would now decide 'that question. The right thing in everything men and boys wear. Elements of the 10th Armored to try to remember exactly who cut Division reached the Saar three off the tip of his nose at Tommy miles northeast of Merzig after a'Dorsey's party, mile and a half advance. Other, The bandleader, his wife Pat units cleared Fitten, a mile and and Allen Smiley, a friend. i in mriiig, ma siasnea are on ujj on charges of assault.

1193 Red Forces Gain In Austria Drive Continued from Page 1 but the defense insisted that the three of them could not all be guilty of cutting off such a small portion of Hall's nose. through to the river bank opposite Merzig, while the 90th Infantry Division came up to the Saar two and a half miles south of Merzig. The central column entered Hil- any IT I Hall's memory got all mixed up I yesterday under defense attorney had thrown upwards of a quarter-. bringen and Battern, both a half reet Fall in million men Into the swaying mile west of Merzig, and arrived 1 d. tUm Omar ir i i rT in can flap.

Jerry Glesler's relentless cross- Close In on Miskolc ZuZ thl Z. examination, mans hnw nn tne brinee leading. (th A-e. O' Npw York 11th Si. at B.

Nw York s. Y. Almost 4.000 Axis troops were directly into the east bank indu.stri-' Hal1 testified that the morning killed or captured yesterday on the' i the bloody free-for-all he Wrrn 8-. Bwrt Ne York Turnout si. ai Bromfleid ai pecs front and in the north, where; asked Dorsey over the phone "who Marshal Rodion Y.

Malinovskys 2d tills fellow Smiley was the guv Ukrainian Army took Eger fizikszo. 59 and 88 miles northeast Giesler. Smileys aUorney. then KiniilI Wool Fleece OVERCOATS nf Budapest, and all but encircled Produced a copy of the testimony Hall made to a grand Jury several ANNOUNCEMENTS "1P comPanlon stronghold of Mis- 9 Tolbukhlr's troops overran more Formidable Barrier Public Noticts a suitdress with satin lighting A dress for occasions rhot call for festivity! Dull black, brown or plum dull royon crepe! Satin rayon flower sproys oppli qued to a jacket smoothly buttoned over a fjored end slimming skirt SIZES I6V2 TO 2614 DRESSES SECOND FLOOR human hair bought. 25c to si oupc than 50 towns and villages and ex- The sgar River represents one of weeks ago.

"Did you," Giesler drawled, "make this statement then: 'Mrs. Dorsey came out on the balcony when I was tangling with Tommy. This is 10 incr.f or lontrr; no eombnm. An n-, panded their bridgehead on the i the most formidable natural de-ij's. 34 w.

2om N. tiiise 3-SJ40 hftnlc th- Danube to 104 k.r. (h- -H h. LADIES It your ht Is ood miles against stubborn resistance, come tm against. The flood-swollen when she cut me with the knife.

I hv It rfimool! reasonao.v r.ir The mam direction of the Russian ilsell has overrun its banks, 'nad hfad instinctively Sof RBBTONalBLB'lor drtt. 'mcunrd orive still was carefu.ly masked. hne behind It stretch 10 miles of and saw lhe blade however, and the Germans obvl- trar)S. ninboxes. minefields.

any one other thu n.jse.1 Hall said maybe he had said that, Ljby. 30511 th 8t ously were uncertain whether the wire, anti-tank ditches and; NOT RESPONSIBLE for dfb' lncurr) by.ggyjp commander Intended Red Press Hails Gains mKP olu' 01 In the tst 24 hours, the 3d Army. NOT RESPONSIBLE tor dfbj Incurred by.iorces norinwBia 10 join iMy Drisoners. boosting In Y.nr inr Ttkmn one other Uln myself. Jamej in the assault Oil Budapest.

iis bag since the start of Its otlcn nlla 8L. I Maltnnv.lrv' vptprant Order hy Mail nr Phnne MA. 4-4200 sue to 25,573 Moscow, Dec. 1 (U.W Th Soviet press, marking the first anniversary of the Tehran declaration, published SOCIAL INTRODUCTION SERVICE open tetniKi tn nliitint tnrl inl1 nr the north stormed into Eger from The special construction o( tliis all wool fleece give you extra warmth without extra weight. Thus outdoors you're always warm, and when you dash into a building or subway there's no tiresome weight to wear you out! As for its luxurious appearance just credit an assist to Browning King styling and tailoring.

Alto tn 100 Woof Ox ml IN NEW YORK: 551 Fifth Ave. at 45 St. 141 eedway, Opp. Ciry Hail Lt. Gen.

Alexander M. Patch's 7th mfn nd womfn; the south, ea.st and west, and routed glowing reviews of the past year's nr.iKii.riin: penonii intra- Nazi garrison after a savage Armv closed to within one to two all-day street battle. On the north-i miles- of the strategic road junction nonsect 1 co military accomplishments today and hailed the Anglo-Soviet-American -7' m. d'tiiy 13 noon-6 p.m. iBum.

1 P-n winR. the Soviet drove fouiif HaRuenftu, 13 miles north of Strasbouri. in converging advances coalition as the most successful ln (Hryant 1 1 r.6arir0 and captured Sziksto. on the over raa.a roaos against oniy sn.au jltlstory. m.

e. Remn Henmjmain railway line from the Piavda, Izvestla ana Red Star iPolish base at Tamow to Mukolc. Slrsbourf Is Shelled Army organ, all carried c3 rookli gf-tau. hi.d tooled T.iLfmn miles to the southwent I Seventeen miles west of Rtras-. lengthy arncles.

identical in tone 547 FULTON COR. DE KALI our 90-ltay Deferred Arrounl Open to 9 P. Ererv Everting Until Chrutmnt Starting Dec. 4th 39th MtsKoic llsen was invested close-: oii nmrmnn ixutucvi; ann couw-m, on uie n- -Jeemtb Brootvn ilv on three sides nd the fall of Barr at the foot tn vosges traordinary military ana political (2)15 Hanover Place-Just OH Futn Bu.ovt. hiir triat, bastion seemed a matter of Mountains and repulsed a eounter-i vlctorlM which stemmed directly ISTWATCH -d.

In T. 517. Rewird. OLamor jattack three miles the south, from the Tehran decision. days at mt..

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About The Brooklyn Daily Eagle Archive

Pages Available:
1,426,564
Years Available:
1841-1963