Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 42, Number 227, Decatur, Adams County, 25 September 1944 — Page 2

PAGE TWO

AMERICANS DRIVING (ContlausU ***** l> then most forward -tahilczed |si*> Hoils Official some >m .-xpialiivd that s yesterday * report :hat the Amer | w<- ,* within 15 miles ot B>» I logtit wa- lu.i-d on forward recon-na-sam. elements who cairn- that > iit.ii to Bdocna on Saturday on patrol and th< n retired Kaliiiitip ottl fiuui rulii|iii’n d 4’ula Pa th* t.ncilcans reached a, p*> jii* •cut!; ol lloco. six and a half mil* due north of Flrcnzuola and ■ apt lied Mont* Ylatllli IX i ml!*- h*- .»' o Firenvuols. w.-st ut 'lie h -'.aay tallowing the San--1.-1... c I ice; nt.l the |’o valley They a ipntrel Monte holla j l ... .;!>’ m. • northea-' ot 1‘ nzuo'.i . ,iof th* highway | and .Motile I'm * a and Monte Por-j a i >ti ’lt* high g .mud inimedia'ejy c. - ’ I til* hi-Jiw.iy hvtwien ,M \ .ti .. and Motile India t.* • a -it tn arc two mlle» south ,-t I .1-1 l>. . Rio. V .*»*•■ .1 Rimini, the Ger mans were nsing the cover of tree* ,c I ■ : y -! •. . ti to. delay ’ w jlo. util t iiiadlan- ol In- . m .• v >j. •,* iy advances | t . IB l llljie a• • • ■W*■■ I of It till Mi. MASSIVE BOMBARD. )*■! f" tra. 1)

iihi < i <>*• ■ ihi • - mil* • . <;H , h ,t! *. . ’!;• p.l >I ;♦» Ih»U! s : A thin ti - k»* ■- anil r« <;. *■ ■ -.i. i; to th*- ur lil t 0i....:v a* I* ■ lll’* *.. Up Oil th* -ou :i. I a d i ’l> in d: n U I i) • t* jo h*d .... d : c» V • “ til* it". repl al* ' 11 r> 111 !' I ... .1

■ ** i -®O W fflFlr *- • J ® ** ? 1 ; * ~ dtr jAk I ™ <Hr i .. i /bJBML'.-iw * iH^BljyW AMERICAN OFFICERS, eating in a former German oSccr-' nr.ss hull ,r, jrunce. arc üblr.iouj to the «wa«Uku muial on the wall. The iuuciU umU> ; iv..~.ui long, nowv.cr. (i«s:;ruiuo..il z -•- **- . . .. . ' • * ;? ' . 4 . aB j . £ jU ■ -lfwl l^h fj t» - -**' qF-r*’,'.,-\ * NAZI PROPAGANDA, by th* hale, wu found In a library of a Ger-man-run Khoot near Meta. France, by U. 8 forces. The school waa Vias uxed ar an eflteera' cadet school for Russians with the books printed in Russian. Wsrcast QBear Brink B Deaglu of loyal Cab. Mich, scans the propaganda Ui the photo above. (latuuuoul)

J troops and Nazi havy and light * guns maintained a drumfire on | their imsitioiis In an effort to wipe ' them out and remove the threat of a possibly detisivi armored bi jk thr< tirli into northwestern j Germany While the 2nd army s mam effort c titered oil bridging the Ifhiue at Arnhem and holding the flanks of its supply corridor from Nijmegen American ami British troops stabbed ac ross the licit* hi*. rin.cn border east and southeast of Nijmegen 111 undetermined strength One formation of British tanks i and American paratroops crossed th*- trontl'-r due east of Nijmegen ind . ipturvd the German Icorder town of Bcek nine miles northwest of Klrevi where the German i Siegfried line fortifications are I believed to end 1 nited Press war * r< spo'ld* fit j Ric li.ii.l II M< Millar indicated in a delayed front dispatch that tile | far b. voinl ll* * k into th* Belch, Ancle kmeriian force pem-trated puss ld> into Ih* Relchswald foi • • four miles to th*' south where *i -eioiid invading force wac repelted to hac* entered German ■ ll from the w* st O 2 AUTOS WRECKED c'nntlnncwi rraa t> -- tigated. that he was blinded

l.y Hu lights of a passing -ar li.iiii i.. to lit .ar was <-timatc’d it a .out SI'IU lie sustained ‘ r.s. and a stiff knee Supplemental Gas At Local Ration Boards O !<• • i <l* '»!»• 15 Ui k • :n» ii'.i’ .*.» / . .. • ' UH bit I so ..idle' ’ : ■ : ‘ ■ I ■ • ’ \: m * qn.i • |y < H!nnp rdal A • o I i I.ii- c v hl I p. ■ o :;: »V* ; ,ih : <i' ;* ? *h Jllujil •

I# - M » r t ’ > ws.. ; I ISO i ’ 1? S’ -T3F K wlfl ■I --.f. FIRING POINT BLANK with its 76-nim. gun. this U. S M-10 tank destroyer clears a path through a aid* street in Brest, by liquidating the Nazi pillbox emplacement guarding it. (Interaatiooal Soundphoto)

!>.- if.* I by OUT Till- !.. a po| ... watch aa .oirwide. well re , in -'.iff ediii'.iona th nigh mt < ililag.l legion Os -even mid- > • a stales of .cpptoxtm.i’c ly 27 I per i ent. ■ • Maritime Service Seeking Recruits t'.i.. a.- . ..'* Mi I* -oe 2G c.- t ' A a.. : I .13 I 17'* ar* a- • I>|. -,s of a drive I now '** ,ng . u:.|ii. ...| *y • I tM,< time S. ■. . N- w . ;u w ;; lu- »-:d>ted as appri litii e '* cn* a and ■ nt to ■ ..itiitlg a She. p»h< .id Bay ::i

1 .’k.yn. N i \t’* -ei .w* -*k•"i '..num.- ■ - c i.i .ip,*.y for iepi - i.ei .ci iu. . li-.idmr io , ;>>g.» .*” radio ojceia! cook- .ctid hik ie s. pumpmen, m.* 1 hlnist-. pi*-- ■ and iic.ipita! . yrprtitivti o< gi' i..i. ■ ■ 'ti'.ng oft,.. -for | lllitio.-. Indiana ind W » in i**■i .. ii .'*l3 *ll j Itli ■ S fill, a.-,. |

( - —i 1 f -J. , T? . iv- * *' ’ ' * - •V' ' \ ( ... but \ not for the hands! I keep vour haixk »<>lt, omoolh / land - hue, chi- aa your emarteal I a< > cworiea, with SOFSKIN. 1 Toucan defy v’ork and heather, I avoid rough. reddened -kin, by I ueiug SOFSkIN regularly. 1 sorsKin CR€m€ .Vnn %(irln . (hnelr-urfirs ' 35c, 60c, $1 00 SMITH DRUG CO.

'' I! H jal,* 1 J w3| P H '." v 5 ■ SS? - V‘ m •’ 1 ' r',. '.v *5 * a?- .*' «■'•■■ • - ■■* ;'.'. r 3WBTj3BL, * /‘ v ’ * "Tj '7 k ■■ 4SFCOKSUIRiNO YANKS, entering the duchy cf Luxembourg ut be:oe« to rendenU ai jeung and old com cjit tp ggel < UtUf girl »tey toiv-axd to gCAer toaGL flattraiuoatl).

DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT, DECATUR, INDIANA

Angola Officer Is Air Crash Victim A:dlllo: ■ likta .S. p’ 2a il l’l I. Stanley G I’arsell, son d .Mt--171.a Pa -el. Vigola Ind. Wa. a ■ it. tig tli fly. is kill. I y -!>■• day 111 ie ash of i: h avy iMinibc ■ n.-a. her*- the army aiinoun . 1 tola) Six >f tie <,*w memliei.i pc .; .1 I I to safety ijefot I th- pt.ille I : i.i’. - ltd I FOUR MAJOR STRIKES (Continue/) Ft air r»g» ii hill <.■*»•! I 111 Midi. C f ft. I -• is

11.0 l —I. oil .-'i lk* nt th* til l;-, s pl.ilif Ib'W ct i 1 li.s work* I at •ii.i- t.'clory wo. io In- laid off tod,.) dm to cutbacks in Hi* pro-

43r?7‘ «, < I 4 F * 1 B& . 1 Ljbr 1 * ,?v ” z *\*/^-* y K r; " MF- <-W iwiK' - --** ■ nBjBL■• J.Jc 3 2v3' # 'W dw »W. 3 4 * A GERMAN OfflClt, one of the 20,000 Nazis who surrendered in southwest France to the American Oth Army, “smashes” his own bagsaee al he enters a prison compound somewhere near the Lotre River. He doesn't look too happy about the whole idea. Signal Corps photo. (International)

dm lion of I! 17 flying fortresses, kt Cleveland where a strike of lim trainmen has tied up 4 duo util*-.' Workers, officials ot tin* He,'iiblu Steel company s Corrigan.Mi Kim. y plant estimated that 'lie walkout has cost tin- production of anotiii’i l.eoo tons of steel. V Gadsden, a strike of 3" ■i i. sl.iy. r . c 'initiiui'd into its Math d. v and ihiea’i nod Io c lose . .al open hearth ft’rnaces cmployijig workers at the' He- * public plan’

' * * VJ d Waste Paper KirtWßAiAwf is a vital weapon of u ir. Save it EpW» snd save some Bl boy's life!

CAMPAIGN EXPECTED (Conttnund From rags 1) I. It . pt.Tfi and PHO c ampaigns Ilia I Itemoc ratie headquarters began to get jittery ill * ally October of ti.ose yearn. It was about then four yeais ago that the president abandoned his uo-c uinpaigti pro gram to embark on the inspection lours of national defense plants which Kepublieans so bitterly assailed as campaigns in disguise This year .Mr Kcsisevelt has said that 11" will not campaign for re-election "in the usual sense." Ills advisers however, will press for all active campaign As the days pass Hie pressure will inc rease, e specially for Mr Hoose celt to show himself in N'-w York. Pennsylvania. Ohio. Indiana, and Illinois if tin yi an get him to betroit. so much the belter. The only future pv.ikitrs engagement so far announced is a broadcast from here Oct oGERMANY PLANNING ■*ntlnu»4 From rags It I . . 01. they -aid in addition to the measures being taken along the Rhine, the whole area between the frontier an*l the river was broken out ill a rash of community digging ordered by Gauleiter Giohe of Cologne • and Aachen. The digging is taking three I forms; firstly, elaborate anti-tank t ditches, reflecting tin- inadequacy -of the German armor facing the ■ American tanks; secondly, a circle i of tieid fortifications around each -of a number of towns and villages; thirdly, an attempt to build a third , Un* to replace the two west walls , | already breached by the Americans I The Todt organization, meanwhile. is building fortitlvat lona on the east bank of the Rhine. -o RUSSIANS DRIVE tContlnuM piom r»«» I) uiileh inside Hungary A Moscow broad, awl lac illy I the drive into Slovakia, reporting that Gen han Y Petrov's Itli rkranian army leached tile southern slopes of the Bli-s---kid mountains in a drive southwest of ill*- Polish luirder town of Sanok The Soviet spearheads apparently wen- aimed at Humenne, 27* miles inside the border and tlie .eno- distance from Hun nary's nortbeaatern frontier Turkish repoits relayed by BBC said tin- fast-rolling Red army offensives touched off riotous peace demonstrations and strikes in

i I ■ H i A - ; l ■ 1 m il 0 I. I A L B ‘Li A rir r-rr- 1 v nF i! I I vWk £ 1 1 I V x I A ® MS SERVICE In sharp contrast to the rising costs of nearly © e I commodity and service, GAS is still available at no m , in cost to you—although it costs more to produce it- I In fact, the average cost of your residential gas service now 13% less per unit than it was in 1939. I Compare Gas Service with your other living costs anu) I will realize it is still one of the biggest bargains y^ u I ever enjoyed. I , i A- bl AFLfeTON, Ua aI I

1 PTk' ' *'!■ L fw I HL i 1 \ 1 * | KB RMK INTRODUCiNS Gen George C. Marshal! r • \*. a! before the 26th national convention of the A:an cago Is Warren Atherton, national con.:.'.a: o, Marshall gave the delegates a summary < f Am* r.ran and success in World War 11. (/ntcrnationil

i Hungary, and the German Trans-1 1 ocean news agency said ail 250.00i> German nationals in the Transylvanian border l egions luid been j *

■ Mils I J MKB ¥? V k' Pepri-Cola Company. Long hlnrnl ' ,/■’ V. E MHF Funchned Bottler; Pepn CoU Betti ng C. ' F;rt W»,«e MH

MONDAY, SEPTEMBEII 2i

v i *— BsgHffi Trad.- ■ • _