Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 3 May 1940 — Page 3

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YHE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES PAGE 8

FRENCH INSIST Basic Allied Strategy Fails in Norway: [FEARLOSSESOF | ALL'S NOT LOST Increasing Pressure Placed on Government ALLIES HEAVY IN | IN NORWAY WAR ; hordes will be hurled against their NAMSOS FLIGHT

innocent neighbors in the southeast of Europe. They might well do Situation at Narvik Termed British, French Described Hopeful; Close Watch As Embarking in Rain of

more than one of these things in Is Kept on Italy. Machine Gun Bullets.

preparation for an attack on the Western Front or even a lightning swoop on this country.” It was in connection with this statement, and Mr. Chamberlain's announcement of an Allied fleet concentration in the eastern Mediterranean, that political quarters ' PARIS, May 8 (U. P.).—The Allied studied with eager interest today STOCKHOLM, May 3 Wu P). = attack on Narvik is developing the possible meaning of a para- The Bes RPE a 2 “very favorably” and the balance graph i Jatt night's authorized RD pS dly under severe sheet of Norwegian gains and losses > ik Ro icagiing SCe oongenist German aerial attack—Wednesday leaves Germany in the red, a French It urgently appealed to Rumania nd yesterday, according to a mese War Office spokesman asserted to- not to delay any necessary request|S2ge today from Hoesen military day. for Allied aid, and added: TA et Against the Allied withdrawal in “In Palestine, Syria and Bgypt| .°% CUS AT FOG non § : great armies of England and France 3 » central Norway, he listed these fav- machine-gun bullets” from German orable factors: planes, according to unofficial ree ; i h ports from the Namsos area. Fghting conunuing OD vie Messages said that the airplanes ge ' pi Son yy Nivupered ie Aliey troops as they ments o pine chasseurs - withdrew, and thus gave up a rived and the situation at Narvik Norway except the narrow northern is developing “very favorably.” coastal fringe centering around Nare Norway no longer can be used by Germany as a neutral channel for supplies,

are massing. Hitler understands nothing but force, and the Allies vik. Allies have cut off German supplies of iron ore from Narvik, leav-

have enough force in the Near East ing only the Swedish Baltic route

to smash utterly any Balkan adventure Hitler may undertake.” as an unsatisfactory substitute. Claim Third of Fleet Lost

It was forecast that any reorganization of the Cabinet might be preGermany has lost one third of her fleet and many troop casualties

cipitated from within the Ministry through the sinking of more than

FRIDAY, MAY 3, 1940

CARRY ON WITH WAR, IS PLEA OF | HITLER TO ARMY

Germans Accuse Britain of Attempting to Find New War Theater.

BERLIN, May 8 (U. P.).—Chancellor Adolf Hitler today addressed 6000 members of the German armed forces at the Sports Palace and ex-| horted them, according to the DNB|: cfficial news agency, to carry on at the front the struggle for the existence of the German people. The rally was closed to ~outsiders. The rally was ended by Field Marshal Hermann Goering who led the officers in a great shout of “sieg heil” for the Fuehrer,

Allies Are Warned

Authorized German quarters turned their chief attention to the Balkans and Mediterranean, where, they charged, Britain is seeking “at all costs” to create a new theater of war, These quarters then warned that “Prime Minister Neville Chamberlain and Winston Churchill can be certain that wherever they striky we will strike back.” “The question which is uppermost fs who is to be the next victim. Is it Rumania, Greece or Jugoslavia? Or should it all be regarded as a great bluff to cover Allied

Press and Public Dis?arbed; Stock Exchange Almost At Standstill.

(Continued from Page One)

zone—before a House of Commons full dress debate Tuesday. The effect that Mr. Chamberlain's announcement yesterday of the abandonment of Andalsnes was shown today In an almost standstill Stock Exchange. The almost automatic advance of British Government securities was halted. Italian bonds dropped as did Greek and Bulgarian ones,

The Germans held all central Norwegian positions of real strategic value and the Allies were forced to fight them, if at all, on the coastal edge. By their forced withdrawal from Andalsnes the Allies at best had lost their chance of a quick seizure of their most vital objective, Trondheim. Not much was said openly here about the factors of German air and submarines bases on the Norway coast, or the possibility of air raids on Britain, But they bulked large in the minds of strategists who saw the war as one great picture.

Termed Nazi Invasion Blunder

Not only Mr. Chamberlain but Winston Churchill, his senior Defense Minister, had called Herr Hitler's Scandinavian invasion a

Dorothy Jones Mrs. Lucille Rushton

Two Young Women Struck, Left in Downtown Street

Police today sought for a hit-and-run driver who last night struck two young women at Meridian and Washington Sts. and left them lying unconscious in the street. In another accident, on Road 67 one-half mile east of Emerson Ave, Roscoe J. Maddoxx, 22, Evansville, escaped serious injury when he reportedly went to sleep and his truck turned over against a utility pole.

CALLS ARRESTS [£50 oo =i

Prime Minister Neville Chamberlain of Britain . . . carries increasing criticism on burdened shoulders,

showed they must have received rough handling from Allied troops who were tired after two weeks in the field. It was the first time in this war that British troops had been heavily engaged, the informant said, He continued: “It showed they are as good as their forefathers ever were. They

itself. Mr. Churchill might resign for instance. There had been not the slightest suggestion that he would, but it was reported that the Admiralty, of which he is head, had been eager for a frontal attack on Trondheim from the sea, but that the War Cabinet rejected the proposal as over-costly. There were plain rumblings of a storm of criticism which might break at any time.

Heavy Losses Possible

One eye-witness description of the evacuation of Namsos indicated that the Allies might have suffered con= siderable losses in contrast to the British claim yesterday that they had abandoned their landing base south of Trondheim at Andalshes without loss. The Allies left Namsos “so hastily that much of their equipment was abandoned in the streets and also along the quay,” according to one

Lucille Rushton, 18, of 806 Division St., and Miss Dorothy Jones, 18, of 820 Division St. were found by Larry Saunders, 27, of 2325 N. Dela-

ARMED MAN NABBED

RSENS

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plans elsewhere?” They claimed to see nothing in the attitude of Italy to justify the strengthening of the Allied Mediterranean fleet.

Charge Rumors Are Spread

The DNB official news agency charged Britain with spreading a flood of rumors designed to cause unrest in southeastern Europe including a report that a German attack on Rumania is “very imminent.” The DNB offered no denial of the reports, merely calling attention te them. The press picked up in sensational manner the charge that Britain is seeking to carry the war into the Mediterranean. It was recalled that a similar German press campaign was carried on prior to the German move into Scandinavia. The High Command said that German troops were rapidly mopping up all over Norway. Well informed sources reported that the Germans were hurriedly building submarine and air bases along the Norwegian coast for attacks on the British Isles and shipping lanes. The DNB claimed that German recordS show 135 units of the Brit{sh Navy have been “put out of operation” since the start of the Norwegian campaign.

Claims 2 Subs Destroyed

The High Command said the British had made a few attacks on Narvik, in the Far North, and had been repulsed, and that the demobilization of Norse troops in western Norway is progressing. It claimed that two more Allied submarines had been destroyed by German naval forces in the Skagerrak, and that one and possibly two more British cruisers had been hit by airplane bombs on May 1, in addition to two British airplane carriers and a British destroyer that were bombed the same day as reported in yesterday's communi-

ue. The High Command also said a large transport ship was sunk by a bomb.

Deny Air Raids Caused Damage

“Andalsnes now is in German hands and pacification operations in entire Norway are proceeding rapidly,” the High Command communique said. “In territory north and southwest of Narvik, enemy forces are slowly pressing against our outposts. The attacks were repulsed by German outposts.” Tt said that British planes had raided air fields in Norway and Denmark but had caused no damage. Tt was believed that coincident with the restoration, of communications, the Germans were preparing to make the most strategic use of their new Norwegian bases.

Flying Time to Britain Cut

Tt was pointed out that north Scotland is within 90 minutes’ flying time of Norwegian coastal cities. The distance from Stavanger, Norway, to Aberdeen, Scotland, for example, is 300 miles. It is only 200 miles from Bergen to the Shetland Islands; 300 from Bergen to the Orkneys. The great British naval base at Scapa Flow is within 300 miles of the Norwegian coast where deep fjords provide excellent bases for U-boats. A U-boat maneuvered into Scapa Flow early in the war and sank the British battleship

Royal Oak. SALESMAN, 92, STILL ACTIVE

BOSTON, May 3 (U. P.).—On his

02d birthday, Edmund T. Lamb reported for work as a salesman—a career he has followed for 64 years.

TRAFFIC'S CURE

More Convictions Essential, Karabell Says, Fining: 11 For Speeding.

(Continued from Page One)

to have an operator's license, on one person charged with having four persons riding in the front seat and one person charged with running a traffic signal. He fined another person charged with running a traffic signal $1 and costs, but suspended judgment. The police survey figures showed a 47 per cent increase in the number of traffic accidents for the first quarter of 1940 compared with the first quarter of 1938. At the same time, convictions dropped 65 per cent from the first quarter of 1938 to the first quarter of 1940. “The principle illustrated by these figures—that accidents tend to increase as enforcement decreases—is correct,” Judge Karabell said. “Convictions are the only way of decreasing these accidents.

Raps ‘Reckless Youngsters

“It seems that a rising accident rate is the trend not only here but all over the country. We are trying to deal with it as stringently as we can through the courts. “Not only will we suspend licenses

in serious speeding and in reckless driving cases, but we're going after another source of accidents. It has heen reported to me that youngsters driving cars recklessly are bhecoming a serious hazard. “Whenever such a case comes before me, the license of the youngster will be suspended. We are appealing to parents whose cars the youngsters drive to pass on this warning.” Meanwhile, Safety Board President Iieroy J. Keach, to whom the report was made, said he doubted the validity of any inference that the accidents rise as enforcement relaxes on the basis of the figures.

Reports More Complete

“The Police Department adopted a new method of accident investigation last year which may account for all of the 47 per cent increase,” he said. “Under the oid system, many accidents, even those with injuries involved, went unreported. There are more accidents listed this year because there are more reported.” When his attention was called to an increase of about 25 per cent in

quarter of 1938 to the first quarter of 1939 before the new investigation system went into effect, Mr. Keach said these figures would probably show an actual increase.

drop in convictions from the first quarter of 1938 to the same period

our safety campaign.” “YT feel that there were less arrests and possibly convictions because of greater public co-opera-

Mr, Keach said. Evans Expresses Concern

were inclined to show more concern over the report. William A. Evans, Safety Education Council dent, said: “The figures presentd by Times are rather conclusive evidence that strict enforcement and

He still is active.

effective justice in the courts are

the accidents recorded for the first

Mr. Keach ascribed a 15 per cent decline in arrests and a 65 per cent

of this year as “public response to

tion with the Police Department,”

Safety organizations, however,

Indianapolis Presi-

The

ware St., who picked them up and called police, Police administered first aid and the condition of the victims was reported as fair. Police believe that the car which struck them was damaged. Reports Fleeing Driver Ray Evans, 19, of 3146 Northwest-

30 transports. Germany is now deprived of Norwegian timber and cellulose and Denmark will prove a drain on her food stores. The military situation on the Western Front was quiet, the French communique reporting “some artil-

ern Ave, reported that his car struck the rear end of the hit-and- | run car when it stopped suddenly | after striking the Women and then | went on. Mr. Madoxx told deputy sheriffs,

| Detroit and that he went to sleep

|at the wheel. A few of his teeth|/on continuance

| were loosened, but he appeared to |be otherwise uninjured, deputies said. “I'll never drive a truck again,” the victim vowed to the deputies. Three hit-and-run accidents were chalked up against an unknown driver by police last night. The car sideswiped a machine driven by Clarence Gorman, 1808 N. New Jersey St. at 25th St. and College Ave. It was driven to 21st

came back to 25th St. and College

and a truck waiting for a traffic signal at the intersection. The truck was operated by James Wilson, 1413 E. 24th St, and was parked behind a car driven by Millard Carson, 2533 N. Alabama St. Woman Is Injured Mrs. Hazel Hurst, 49, of 1443 W, 25th St., received a possible concussion and possible fracture of both legs yesterday when a car she was driving was struck by another machine at 18th St. and Sugar Grove Ave. Police charged Thomas Hendricks, 22, of 521 N. Grant Ave, driver of the other car, with reckless driving and failure to give the right-of-way. Six-year-old Nona Alte, 1226 Comer Ave. received a back injury yesterday when a car in which she was riding was in a collision with another machine in the North Drive of Garfield Park. Police said the drivers of the two cars were Dallas V. Alte, 57, of 1226 Comer Ave. and Walter Maas Jr. 22, of 1501 English Ave.

essential to the improvement of our safety record.” Mr. Evans recalled a resolution adopted jointly by the Safety Council and the Indianapolis Council of Parent-Teacher Associations urging officials to enforce traffic laws more strictly. Mr. George Clark, president of the Indianapolis P.-T. A. Council, said the figures, “if correct, show a most unfdrtunate situation.” “These figures are alarming; inasmuch as traffic accidents will probably rise when summer comes and the children are out of school 41and on the streets. It gives us something to think about. “Certainly the driver and the pedestrian should have more of a sense of responsibility in observing regulations. Straict enforcement will help accomplish this.” The Police Department figures shoved that there were 902 accidents in the first quarter of 1938, 1176 in the same period in 1933 and 1721 the first three months of this year, In the same period, there were 5161 convictions in 1938, 3864 in 1939 and 1782 this year.

|

OFFICIAL WEATHER

U. 8S. Weather Buren co

INDIANAPOLIS FORECAST: Fair and continued cool tonight, with frost prob-

able; tomorrow fair and warmer.

somewhat

Sunrise 4:42 | Sunset

IN INDIANAPOLIS

Here Is the Traffic Record

County City Total 29

1939 sss BREN RETR ERS 12 1% 1940 ..... 28

6 | Accidents .... 0 | Arrests

Cases Convic- Fines paid

$284 50

Violations tried tions Sp ceding 47 Reckless driving. 20 20

Failure to stop at

street 10 10

12 Drergen driving 3 3 All others ...... 36

Totals sitesi 181 - ——— MEETINGS TODAY

otel Severin, noon.

35

127

xchange > & lumbia Ciub_ noon. gouim ub. Columbia, CI Board of n

he eta | Canary Cottage. noon hy Tau a oTumbis Club. noon ndians Stamp Club. Hotel ® Kappa Sigma, Canary Cottage noon. be ret

MEETINGS TOMORROW

Hotel

Association, Hotel Washington

fi tler University anhual hen, house A r Jordan Mmorial oll Sor or Se Aton vel Severin, 8 p.m orway ®. Dm.

36

24

24

38 55

’* ss

Antlers, 8

BIRTHS

Girls Milford, Geraldine Via, at St. Ralph, Maxine Miley, at St. . Ralph, Florence Sears, at St. Francis. James, Bessie Alexander, at St. Francis Arthur, Betty Evans, at Methodist. Martin, Lucille, Woehler, at Methodist. Russell, Catherine Baker, at Methodist Orville, Catherine True, at Methodist. Norman, Jean Bartlett, at Methodist. Heiny, at Methodist. Ralph, Pauline Matlock, at 241 Minkner Lee, Iris Head, at Coleman. Boys Walter, Cora Bohley, at St. Francis. Charles, Louise Hopkins, at St. Francis George, Ruby Dickinson, at Methodist. R. D., Mary Moore, at Methodist,

Francis

DEATHS

diana, chronic myocarditis arles

tonitis.

Bise, 17,

broncho-pneumonia. : oodward, 86. at Veterans occlusion

a, Lota Snyder Emery, 51, at St, Vincent's septicaemia.

FIRE ALARMS ; Thursday

v , M.—600 N. Gray, automobile, $50 . M.—3231 N. Adams, tree burned . M.,—2825 E. Michigan, garage M.-5100 N. Keystone, truck. M elby

Friday

Washington. 7:30 le A. M.—1748 W. Minnesota, chickens, $07 i M2201 N. West, welder’s torch,

Fred G. McAlexander, 52, at Central Inat Long, general periMary Ann Covington, 9 months, at 1824 Colum ia,

Tharp, 59, at 521 Marion, cere-

New b.5 and Garfield, de"M500 Block Indiana, auto- x

TEMPERATURE ~May 8, 1939 5119 Mm ass 59

BAROMETER

Precipitation 24 hours ending 7 a. m. 05 Total precipitation since Jan. 1 Deficiency since Jan. 1

MIDWEST WEATHER

Indiana— Fair and continued cool, ‘scattered light frost except in extreme southwest portion tonight; tomorrow fair, Somewhat warmer in east and central porions.

Minois—Fair tonight and tomorrow, not much change in temperature; scattered .|light frost in north and central portions tonight. Lower Michigan—Partly cloudy, continued cool tonight; tomorrow fair, someShat warmer in west and central porons.

Ohio—Mostly cloudy and continued cool, occasional light rain in north portion tonight, tomorrow partly cloudy and slightly jarmer,

Kentucky—Fair with light frost tonight; tomorrow fair and warmer.

WEATHER IN OTHER CITIES, 6:30 A. M.

Stations , Temp.

@ 5823333020232303 ’ E hb - rT SN SSSR IN IRR

IRI >

lery fire in the early part of the

blunder. Now they had been forced to revise their opinions as the difficulties of putting an overseas expeditionary force in the field without airfields or adequate wharves | for landing heavy guns revealed | themselves. Photographs of the shattered wreckage of Namsos showed the terrible destruction German bombs

night.” The feeling here was as regards Italy that while she may have determined to maintain non-belliger-ency for the time being there is no

as they administered first aid, that | assurance as to how long this status | ¢ HONG he was Indianapolis-bound from |will continue. Spain, however, was had suffered were due primarily to

felt to have determined definitely of her neutral status. The feeling here is that Benito Mussolini has made no engagement as to the near future.

Speculate on Itay’s Plans

It was reported today that in his conference with Adolf Hitler in the | Brenner Pass, Sig. Mussolini was | asked, in event of his entrance to the war, to cut the Mediterranean

[in two at his Pantelleria Island be-

St, over to Broadway and then tween Sicily and Tunisia and thus

isolate the Allies in the Near East

Ave. where it struck another car from their home bases

It is believed here that Sig. Mussolini could easily cut the Mediterranean at Pantelleria but that extensive operations by his big surface warships would be difficult. The Allies hold the ends of the Mediterranean, it was held; British naval guns at Malta and British naval units based there would be a treat, and France has a powerful fleet based at its Bizerta Station, all in the vicinity of the 80-mile Pantelleria belt.

>)

Ze:

3

or better).

had wrought, and heavy bombing {had continued despite everything |the Allies could do by repeated raids lon German air bases. | The serious setbacks the Allies [two reasons—the impossibility of | securing air fields from which fast fighter craft could operate to drive off German bombers, and the inadequacy of the docks of the little towns available to the Allies for landing artillery, anti-aircraft guns, ammunition and motor trucks.

King Believed in Norway

An authoritative informant, emphasizing that the Allied evacua-

great new problem with which we

carried out the most wWifficult operation there is: Namely, a rear guard action; against overwhelming air superiority, which is today the

have to deal.” It was not so much the retreat of a small, lightly armed British landing party before a strong, wellarmed German force that caused anxiety in Britain, but the effect of the retreat on Norwegians, Swedes, and people all over southeastern Europe, particularly Italians. Further there was the most important question of the effect on Premier Paul Reynaud of France and his Government of an Allied reverse, in view of the highly critical attitude of French political parties toward him. The French Parliament was in recess until May 16. The political situation here was becoming critical.

manded for one week for medica observation today on police repre sentations that he was arrested a

to London,

told him:

He is the one I want.”

The detective added that he un

West had a months ago.

“disturbance” som

ALONG KING'S ROUTE

LONDON, May 3 (U. P).—John man had few details, but said thas West, 38, engine driver, was re- Norwegian headquarters at Formo-

Euston Railroad Station last night, armed with an air gun and a sheath knife, shortly before the King and Queen arrived there on their way

Detective A. Foster, who arrested West, testified in court the man had

“I am waiting for Punch Crow.

derstood there was such a person as “Punch Crow,” and that he and

As the independent conservative Daily Mail put it: one fundamental question: conducting the war in the right

y ”» tion of Andalsnes “does not mean way?

any intention of abandoning Norway,” said that the Norwegian Government still existed in Norway and that it was believed King Haakon was there also. A reliable military informant supplemented this by saying that British troops in the Arctic Narvik zone continued to close in, though the operation was necessarily a “slow business.” Denying German claims that immense quantities of war materials had been captured at Andalsnes, a spokesman said that the inability of the Germans to interfere with

Allied

77

Bs th

embarkation operations

Strauss Says: STORE HOURS SATURDAY 9 A. M. to 6r wm

with of many fields. are prepared and would not seruple to invade Holland, Belgium or both. Or it may be that their savage

Implicit in that question was the question whether the right men were conducting it from Whitehall and Downing Street. A big development in some other theater would be calculated to relieve pressure on the Government for the moment, but for the moment only.

In his

“There remain

speech yesterday

We know that the

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Mr. Chamberlain had said of Germany: . . An attack can be launched lightning rapidity in any one

s

(Earlier Details, Page 21)

Maj. Gen. H. H. Arnold, chief of th

propriations sub-committee toda

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NEW U. S. WARPLANE HAS NAZI FEATURES

WASHINGTON, May 3 (U. P).— Army Air Corps, told a Senate Apthat most of the 1900 combat planes recently ordered by the Army will be equipped with self-sealing gasoline

These features are incorporated in German war-

message quoting the story of an eye-witness who reached Grong from Namsos. The Norwegian legation spokes

l|foss, near Namsos, had confirmed ={that all British and French troops t had departed.

Hint Nazi Army of 150,000

The number of Allied troops at Namsos was never definitely dis closed, but it was said today that the Germans now have an army of probably 150,000 men in Norway. Norwegian troops were said to have continued resistance to the German advance in the Namsos area, but this was regarded merely as a “covering” fight for the withe drawal of the main Allied forces, The Norwegians, according to a € military spokesman, are expected to continue a slow retreating fight along their only land line north of

through Mosjoen toward Narvik, This main road, however, does not connect with Narvik. The highway runs through a narrow valley and could be defended by a small force which would reduce e|the effectiveness of the German mechanized columns, while the y| mountains would offer some protece tion against Nazi aerial bombarde ment. ‘ The Norwegians in the Roeros d|sector, in the Oester Valley near Sweden, were falling back before German troops returning northward up the valley to re-capture Roeros,

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