Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 14 April 1941 — Page 5

5 8

A

MONDAY, APRIL 14, 1941

' THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES eee

PAGE 5

NAZI TANK TROOPS RUSSO-JAPAN

SLICE INTO EGYPT...

BELGRADE TOLL ovsh-re Line wi] a PLACED AT 3000

: : Empire Troops Seek 0 (Continued from Page One)

Break Tobruk Trap. U. S. Vice Consul Pictu | Bitol] Gap, to the north, brought |more important because it came “at

(Continued from Page One) Horror After 4-Day . moment when the Second Im- { their spearhead up to the British | __ . . rit veives . : : . | perialist War continues to speak and Nazi Air Attack. | ine.

. linvolves more countries.” It was {| The British report indicated that inevitable that this statement should | the initial Nazi attempt to pene-

|be connected to the fact that Rus- | {sia si -aggressi treaty the | trate the western end of the Greco- Sia Signed 4 NON-RERTESSION realy | British defense line had failed.

{with Jugoslavia just before it was ti li 7 ‘many, assured TurMr. Horsev started back for| British troops were reported to be Mmvaded Wy Germany, ussured Budapest His automobile was pouring into the defense line in

way for settlement of all outstanding issues between Russia and

Japan, including a trade agreement Florina sector where the dangerous and a fisheries convention. FeS German break-through of the Pravda said the step was all the

(Continued from Page One)

the legation in

suburbs

secretaries

Consider Reassessment SEES CITY NEED FOR SAFETY MAN

| EE. $$ Stricker, National Safety Council Expert, Savs $3600 Is Fair Wage.

(Continued from Page One)

i safety records. From the stand-| | point of service to the community, | the engineer is worth more, he said. “There is no doubt that an engineer will prove immensely valuable in helping Indianapolis improve its safety record,” he said. “He is the man who would lay out a basic program for enforcement officials to

follow.” | Mr. Stricker declared that it is not necessary for the engineer to start out with a large staff to be eflective.

U. S. 1S HANDED 2 STIFF JOLTS

| Copenhagen Voids Greenland Deal; Russia and Japan Sign Treaty.

(Continued from Page One)

i (will back down as a result of their | displeasure Copenhagen, it is recognized here, was making the gestures but Berlin was pulling the strings. Den= mark is occupied by the Nazis. King Christian X and his Government are Hitler's prisoners, doing what they do with pistols pointed at their heads. | Berlin, on the other hand, is not expected to look on with indifference while its handiwork at Copenhagen is flouted by the United States and the Danish envoy. In fact, Nazi spokesmen have already

William A. Hoefgen n

‘key of its neutrality while Germany slowed by the debris and corpses|large numbers to create a “solid | Vas threatening Southeast Europe, littering the streets and roads.|wall” of fighting men across upper Finally his automobile ran out of (Greece. The Royal Air Force congasoline and he could not buy any.!tinued to hammer the Nazi conHe rented a horse and buggy. centrations and rear lines, especially When he was within 20 miles of around Bitolj. the Hungarian frontier he was] stopped. His travel documents were rejected and he was forced to turn

back. He sought out some gasoline, 44 sanguine concerning future got his car, and returned to Bel-|

grade as another air raid was under Prospects. It appeared that new way {attacks can be expected shortly at | Thursday afternoon Mr. Horsey | points west of the Bitolj Gap. Gerset out again in the Belgrade lega- | man and Italian forces can be ex-| tion's American car equipped with |pected to strike down between Lake | a Jugoslav laissez passer, and ac-|Ochrida and Lake Struma toward companied by Col. Louis Fortier. Koritza in a second attempt to flank United States military attache atthe west-east defense line close to Belgrade, and a diplomatic courier | the Adriatic coast. { named Fraiser { In Jugoslavia, the German | Refugees clogged the roads and|claim was that the Jugoslav armies | clawed at the windows of the|/have been pulverized and are now, Americans’ automobile, pleading for | capable of little more than guerilla | a ride. Mr. Horsey picked up a resistance in the mountains of Bos- | woman and her children on their nia, Herzegovina and Montenegro. way to Subotica, and then locked |Both in the north and the south,| the car doors lit was claimed, major Serb units Farther along, the car had to|have been smashed and strong re-| edge its way through the retreating sistance still was encountered only | Jugoslav Army. which hurried south [in the central part of the country.| dragging its motorized equipment| British reports were a little more] over unpaved roads. After hours, optimistic, contending that the] this traffic dissolved and the road |Jugoslavs have braced in some sec-| suddenly was clear. Mr. Horsey said | tors, notably along both sides of he realized he was in no man’s land.|the Morava River, north of Nish| The German had left this area!and northwest of Skoplje. They | north of Belgrade open for the were also said to have captured | Hungarians to occupy | Durazzo, chief seaport of Albania, The problem then was to speed|in a drive down the Dalmatian | to the frontier before the Hungarian coast. Army marched in to block the nar- ris row rocky road. The Americans won 3000 Killed at Belgrade | the race by two hours. Mr. Horsey | However, the Italian communique and Mr. Fraiser crossed the border | reported developments which, if on foot. They hitch-hiked to Szeged,| true, would indicate the Jugoslavs| then continued here bv train. On may soon be encircled. Rome said | iving here, Mr. Horsev had been its Second Army Corps had driven | without sleep 75 hours | down the Dalmatian coast to Gospi, | . ii he { 3¢ miles norih of Zara and that a| column had fought its way east from Bara 50 miles to Kuin. Jugo-

HIGH COURT RULES ir to Kum uso AGAINST LOCAL FIRM wore Te pr oa

A HAIRS 3s : la drive for Koritza was said to be WASHINGTON, April 14 ‘U. P.). | ahout ready to get underway. The Supreme Court today denied One Ttalian report said that two {he petition of the McQuay-Norris Serbian divisions totaling about review of a 30.000 men had been surrounded but | _ |had escaped by boat across Lake | Relations Board |ochrida and joined the Greeks requiring to bargain with | Berlin said that Jugoslavia as an | the United Automobile Workers at | independent state were doomed and | its Indianapolis plant and to cease interfering ‘in any manner”

that the whole British position in| with its workers’ organizing rights. |

the eastern Mediterranean was The company protested that the

threatened. The entry of Nazi troops into battoo broad and undercover many unfair labor

tered Belgrade, where more than] 13000 persons were killed by air at- | tacks and most of the principal | | buildings leveled, was announced. practices neither charged nor proved against jt. Under a recent | decision of the Supreme Court, it| was argued, NLRB orders must

conform reasonably to the charges proved

{ |

Jugoslav Line on Morava British experts, however, were not

ANN

Manufacturing Co. for National

order

Labor it

from

decree took to

was | Merignac Bombed { There was little air activity over Britain, but Germany warned that once the current campaigns are |cleaned up Britain will be blasted The Government opposed review, | as never before. contending the argument was not| The Royal Air Force pounded advanced in the lower courts and Bordeaux and the German seaplane could not be brought forward in |pase at Merignac. the Supreme Court for the first| The German High Command retime, | ported that 33,000 tons of British | shipping had been sunk by the Luftwaffe around the British Isles, that a submarine had torpedoed a 10,000-ton auxiliary cruiser near Iceland and that a British destroyer | Was hit bv a bomb in Greek waters.

V. M. RALSTON NAMED WPA DISTRICT CHIEF

Vernon M. Ralston, 1619 N. Kess{ler Blvd. today was named acting director of WPA District 1 at South Bend by John K. Jennings, state administrator. He succeeds Elmer G. Wenz who resigned recently to take a job in private industry, Mr. Ralston has been serving as director of the Di|vision of Operafions in the Yvans(ville "WPA district. He formerly was a project engineer with the State Highway Commission here and at Vincennes. Q=WHAT IS THE SHAPE OF THE CENTER FIGURE?

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NO FOOLING

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| Axis if the United States enters the

{sources said that Moscow had as-|qocuments at Moscow.

{ no formal protest would be m

{P.).—The Bethlehem Steel

and rebuked Hungary for sending troops into Jugoslavia.

Victory, Axis Claims

The reaction of various capitals follows: f BERLIN—Well-informed sources said: “The treaty is designed to harmonize Japanese-Soviet relations and interests, which follows

The State Tax Board today heard both sides of the controversial question of general reassessment of Marion County property, Tax the Axis policy. The a cer-| Board members (left to right) are C. R. Benjamin, Henry S, Murray tainly is intended to preclude any S3issle | : ; and Peter Beczkiewicz. United States-Russian rapproche- | oy lowier { ment.” ROME—A victory for the Rome- |

Berlin-Tokvo alliance. Tt Kills the | hope of Americans and British that Wa r Moves Today i i

Russia will intervene against the | (Continued o e war. Whereas the Axis had faced | 9 on Page Thre) the possibility of Russian interven- fluence on any Japanese military war in Europe certainly will not be tion against Japan, if Japan be- drive southward. altered by the new treaty. ‘Lhe came involved in war with the| The new pact is not a full non-| United States has not based its posUnited States, this possibility was |aggression agreement since it does|sible actlons in the future on the at an end [not end Russian aid to China. By | course of events in Russia. LONDON-—Semi-official quarters |increasing aid to Chiang Kai-shek,| There is as much disproportion in saw the treaty as not necessarily [Russia might cause Japan to limit| Japan's agreement to help Germany unfavorable to Britain, on the dispersal of many troops beyond the against America under the Triple theory that it freed Russia to cope [Chinese combat area. | Alliance as there was in Japan's more activelv against German| Although the neutrality treaty pledge to help Germany against aggression in Europe. Bui this was provides for Russian recognition of | Russia. Japan could be of some asoutweighed in many minds by the Manchukuo and Japanese recogni-|sistance to Germany but not Ger- | threat of greater Japanese ag- tion of the Mongolian People’s Re-| many to Japan if America became! gressiveness in the South Pacific | public, nothing is said about con-|g belligerent. which is dominated by Singapore |tiguous Mongolian territory | Japanese public opinion, having and British Malaya, perhaps overt ihoth countries have rival interests.|forced a break in the Triplice tc acts that would divert British That reason, coupled with natural |escape giving all and getting noth-

|

Hull Not Surprised

con of

Informed Chinese

attitude toward

strength from the main theater of hesitancies which are characteristic [ing regarding Russia, may now bei var, jof Japanese psychology, should be | gin to ponder the similar lack of {sufficient to cause a policy of cau- {reciprocity concerning trouble with : (tion in denuding Manchukuo of America. If that happens, Japan WASHINGTON-—Secretary of Japanese troops for use elsewhere. (eventually may escape from this] State Cordell Hull said the pact was| Berlin pretends to believe {he new | final entanglement of the Triplice.| “no surprise” and that its im- treaty will strengthen Japan's posi-|with great benefit to peace in the portance “could be overestimated.” tion as an active German agent if | pacific. He added that this country’s policy | America were to enter the European | —— opposing Japanese expansion in war, However, if Russia wished to the South Pacific—remains un-|take advantage of that situation. | N changed. A different attitude was|/she could do so bv giving China taken by Rep. Hamilton Fish (R.|more assistance without breaking N. Y.)., who said in a speech to the any provision of the pact. 1 LIVE OF FOUR House that the treaty was “the in-| Anyway a Pacific Ocean flict evitable result of our militant in- would be essentially a war sea | terventionist policy’ and that “it is power and blockade. ‘Thus, now as | (Continued from Page One) | beginning to look as if our bewil- | pefore, Japan will certainly judge | : : i dered policy of quarantining Europe je consequences to herself by naval | up the convicts scent on the shore and Asia has brought ruin and dis- and blockade measurements. Those | and followed It toward A wooded aster.” \primary factors have not been | height a quarter of a mile from CHUNGKING |changed by yesterday's exchange of | te Iver. | Shortly after police, about 50 sured China that the treaty does| America’s the | strong, started to scale the mounnot ‘affect ‘the “fundamental”|——m———— ss — | tain, McGale and Riordan emerge8 Soviet policy of aid to Free China|, y | from the woods with their hands in Wo against Japanese in- ‘PRE-ROASTED NAZIS up. They had discarded their guns vaders. Foreign Minister Wang { and offered no resistance after find-| Chung-hui, however, inferentiaily | BATTLING IN DESERT [ine themselves trapped. |

criticized the joint Russo-Japanese | VICHY. France. April 14 (U. p).| The prisoners made their break declaration of mutual respect for Reports ved In Vichy today | from the prison hospital where one| the frontiers of Manchukuo and said that German troops fighting in | of them was an inmate attendant Outer Mongolia, which China claims | 0 oh Africa had been subjected io|and the other two were patients Sal behing I ner 1 was said}, special scientific heat treatment apparently feigning illness. The ade 10 to prepare them for action under a | three escaped through. a narrow burning desert sun. | service tunnel which runs from the The troops were described as) hospital basement to a railway gorge |hand-picked from volunteers and (beyond the prison walls.

ltrained for months in desert war-| There evidently was

Russia.

PAY RAISE GIVEN BY

vy more in-|in recent in

subjected to progressivel April 14 (U. tense daily treatment special | ers had guns and keys to all three Corp., | ‘ovens.” doors in the tunnel, which carries The floors of the ovens were cov-| steam pipes and electric cables from al right-of-way

ai

years. JOHNSTOWN, Pa.

the nation's second largest steel pro- | . |ducer, today announced a 10-cent ered with hot sand, it was asserted, | the New York Cent:

‘and hour pay increase for its 90,000 and they spent hours in a tempeva-|to the prison. employees. ture of around 105 degrees. The | The three who broke were serving The increase is effective April 1.|heat was maintained by sunlamps. {15 years or more for robberies

Fi rst Eye-Wi fness

a deck under foot, lit the omnipresent Greek cigaret and turned their eyes northward toward the low, bare foothills of the Rhodopes, where their comrades were still struggling to stem the Germans in the Strymona Pass. It wa: noticeable that a few hundred were aboard the boats, most apparently having been taken aboard the southward train. One burly private, in a misshapen overcoat, standing upon the quay, told me a characteristic story: “I'm an Athenian, but my ents live in Salonika. After

(Continued from age One)

their faces momentarily cheered, the people hroke a silence based upon expectation of the unknown. But when it was found that the enormous black cloud was due to the fact that one of the camouflaged oil tanks, banked upon the western end of the waterfront, had been fired, the portent was unmistakable. Perhaps it was due to stubborn, stoical Greek courage that no panic gecurred. Ry the Army had foreseen a final rush evacuation to the extent of building two new pontoon bridfes the same afternoon, Mon- | day, of the air raid. At 6 o'clock the last train had departed from a tiny boxlike little station in Salonika, carrying what it could of huge packages of army stores which had been piled upon the platform. Since few believed that bridges still existed, there were only a few persons at the station and there was virtually no demonstration, but if the sound of hearts breaking could be heard, the reverberation from those obliged to stay behind while the final connection with free Athens was being broken, would have made thunder outdoing the heaviest artillery. In the meantime, the heaviest Greek motorized equipment went pouring through the main boulevards. The Army was saving everything that could be saved. Departing soldiers tried to cheer the crowds by shaking their fists toward the north, but the pedestrians merely stood and watched, a few sadly raising their hands At intervals of 15 minutes, giant oil reservoirs blew skyward. Soon the work of demolition squads, determined that the Germans should not find even the little advantage of fuel tanks, spread to a second yard, and another terrific column of smoke and flame mounted sky- Most of the Greek Army ward. the northern frontier was By 6 o'clock it would have been |of oily smoke had joined at a great withdraw from around natural to expect that some such |height over the city. | Bay, blowing up bridges 'mass rush upon the few vessels at | ‘the waterfront as occurred at bulary and civil employees, includ- which now waits the Germans to Smyrna and upon the occasion after ing those of the telephone, tele- | the southwest of the city. [World War I of the burning of Sal-| graph and railroad services, crowded| But in order to save the heavy ores, but none occurred. aboard two big freighters in the|equipment, artillery, material and | |

par-

Now this happens. Not knowing quarters, but it was closed The next thing I tried was the police. ‘Soldier, vou can stay here or leave. We're leaving,’ I was told So 1 left. It was too bad to spoil my 20 days’ leave like that.”

Army Escapes Too holding able

as they

There were pathetic scenes at the | bay, the overflow was obliged to take the invaluable technical heads of dock where civil administration em- | caiques, coastwise sailing vessels,|the general staff of the eastern cam{averaging about 40 feet long, with paign, and to accomplish thorouzhly Diesel power. After the 6 o'clock the work of sabotage, somewhere, train left, the oil tanks continued relatively small Greek forces had to to blow up briskly in a manner hold the breach during the withprobably extremely satisfying to the| drawal. demolition squads, but a new and| when the surrender of Salonika deeper note suddenly came, about T'was jmminent, these men, having o'clock, from the western marshes: joyally done their job as a stop-gap,

I ployees were bidding goodby td their (relatives, and the tiny dock behind la villa east of the city, where Brit[ish citizens were being carried by | tender down the bay to a waiting

vessel.

Bridges Blown Up bridges going heavenward,

| supplement the work of the engi- |

| told

| thrust

outside aid

BETHLEHEM STEEL fare. They were said to have heen |in this first break from Sing Sing |

The three prison-|

Story of Sal onika's Fall Reaches U. S Populace Was ‘Haunted’ but Bravely Avoided Any Panic

being | wounded in Albania, I received per-| mission to visit them for 20 days.|

what to do, I went to general head- |

to! Salonika!

While soldiers, Federal constan-|went and preparing the line of steel]

would be an engineer staff to work

The contention that it useless to consider without a 40-man under him had been advanced by City officials when the subject was under consideration at City Hall. At the Chamber of Commerce | safety luncheon. Mr. Stricker stressed the need of a unified safety committee of citizens to

HOEFGEN DREAM

IS COMING TRUE

Washington Park Cemetery Head Intends ot Build $500,000 Mausoleum,

A $500,000 known as the

and enforcement. In Kansas | Providence, R. I., and other | with good records. the com- | had proved valuable, he |

neer City, cities mittee said “Traffic conditions are more difficult today than ever before,” he will be erected in Washington sald. “There are more cars on the pa k Cemetery, William A Hoefgen streets, cars are traveling more : miles, more alcohol is being con- cemetery president, announced sumed and there js in general a |today. disturbed attitude of mind. | The structure will complete an “In every city where they are extensive building development bedoing a good traffic job, they have gun 14 years ago. The new adminin addition to the traffic engineer istration building was a unified organization of citizens two years ago and public officials pushing traffic| The mausoleum safety.” structed of Indiana limestone and Following the | concrete reinforced with steel, Chamber Mr. [bronze and wrought iron. Stricker confer! It will be a two-story

mausoleum, to be

ries”

is to be con-

his address to group at noon,

was expected to building

with Mayor Reginald H. Sullivan | With the main floor devoted entirely | on the City's new traffic program. | to private family rooms and crypt|

space. Private Rooms Included

Also included will be a conservatory and private rooms for use

PERFECT DEMOCRACY cue entombment The { building will be air conditioned and

WASHINGTON, April 14 (U py. | Will contain musical equipment and Vice President Henry A Wallace | Amplifiers | “The Sanctuary of 1 101 the Pan-American Union to- The Sanctus Menvories the result of many vears of thought day at a celebration of Pan-Ameri-| and development of an ideal.” Mr can Day that “the torch of civiliza-| Hoefgen said tion has been placed in our hands.” Tt fulfills my promise of many If “w the New | CAIs to the public in which I have we, A Wi planned, created and developed World, do to the the beautiful Washington Park extraordinary which | Cemetery. So insistent cials felt delayed

services

is

the peoples of

not measure

responsibility

up

the cemetery officould be

that that the project no longer

the events of the last 25 years have upon ' he said, "we shall in all truth be reduced to a state of impotence and confusion. , . be a palace of heauty in which the “We have it in our power 10! peloved mav be laid to rest with realize Bolivar's great dream of aimgre dignity and less sadness.” Pan-America whose glory should be a her sense of justice and liberty— | we shall perfect a democracy in| which respect for rights is balanced! by the willingness to shoulder | duties.” | Mr. Wallace reaffirmed the “pro-| found interest” of the United States in building up an impreg-| nable hemispheric defense, but he] added: “We will carry on as a hemisphere but in so doing, we shall hope that eventually the world will | again be one world, bound together by the everlasting ties of peace and understanding.”

us

Sanctuary of Memo- |

completed |

Public demand has been |

“The new structure we plan will|

warned that Berlin would reply “ap= propriately” as soon as Copenhagen had had its say. | Now Copenhagen has spoken. Hit= ler, therefore, may do any one of {a number of things. He might {force King Christian to send “Danish troops” to garrison Greenland with orders to keep American naval and air forces out at whatever cost. | The United States would then either thave to occupy Greenland against the fictional opposition of Denmark, or back down humiliatingly and permit the Nazis to take possession of the outpost through their dupes. Or the Nazis themselves might try any direct intervention in Greenland as they did in Norway, acting alone or in conjunction with the Danes Meanwhile the Japanese Foreign Minister is on his way home with the real thing he went to Europe | to get securely in his possession. What Japan really wanted—free{dom to pursue her aggressive { policy in the Far East without fear | of Soviet intervention—was handed to him at Moscow, full of potential danger to the United States.

Japan Got Desires

Diplomatically, Japan now stands where Germany stood in the sum[mer of 1939. At that time, Hitler was contemplating war against Poland, Britain and France, but he was afraid of Stalin. If he attacked in the West, Stalin might attack him from the East. He therefore asked, and got, Stalin's promise not to interfere From that moment on, it is now clear, war was inevitable. Thanks to Stalin, Hitler had nothing to fear from the East Today, Japan holds a similar pledge. In Matsuoka's pocket as he journeys towards Tokyo, he has the assurance of the red dictator that if Japan goes to war against the United States, Russia won't mind. On the contrary, if Japan and the United States fight each other, every great power in the world, except Russia, will then be involved and when they have de|stroyed each other, she ean pick their bones.

|

ASKS 700 MILLION MORE

| WASHINGTON, April 14 (U. P) President, Roosevelt asked Congress today to add $728,767,000 to the $6,000.000,000 War Department [ budget for the fiscal year starting July 1. The new request included $289.,065.000 for the Army Air Corps.

If

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warehouses in the harbor's free zone caught fire. The personnel of the |Jugoslav area, mostly Serbians, left | aboard whichever sailboats wculd | carry them, heedless of destination. | | The last train from their homeland | had passed the Ghexgheli-Idomeni (frontier at 11 o'clock the night be- | | fore, after having been dive-bombed | | by nine Stukkas in and cutside | {Skoplje and abandoned by the pas|sengers seven times because of air alarms while passengers’ papers |

fa

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alight with waterfront fires, two

aio se i

deep successive booms were heard, |

indicating that the powder maga- | zines of the chief fortresses guard-

ing Salonika had been blown up. | Soon afterward, fire leaped upward | from a flour factory which, if left | standing, would have furnished | r.utriment to the oncoming German | divisions which reports now number at five. | Te writer went aboard a small] sailboat, supposedly destined for | { Chios. Before leaving, he had a final conversation with Charles House, head of the American Farm | {School which has trained hundreds of Greek boys to farm the American way, Asked when he was leaving with his wife, Ann, Mr. House, an agriculturalist who is also head of civil relief and the American

and

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Red Cross work here, replied: | “I guess we'll stay. We've lots| {of people on our hands. Besides, [there ought to be a neutral author{ity to accompany the mayor when {he goes out to meet the Germans.” | The engine of the sailboat carry-|

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EYES EXAMINED GLASSES ON CREDIT

So great was the rush among Cypriotes, Smyrniotes and Jews carrving the authentic blue passport that the small camouflaged yacht was unable even to accommodate two Americans desiring passage. In the end, the tender simply failed to return after taking off British diplomatic pouches which had come from Athens the day before, leaving a small knot of pathetic people upon the quay for care by the imaginary financial resources of the American consulate.

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In the meantime the two columns!

2401 for and a no man's land between to-| the cunning of Homer's time, |

; were given the choice of yielding to ing the writer to the south stalled Most of the small army of aged|the Germans and making their way |in the harbor. and it was nearly taxis probably got through—at least|to the sea, where a motley assort-|1 o'clock and the moonlit bay was those which left before 3 o'clock. ment of vessels of all sizes and | completely deserted, when the! The first Nazi motorized equipment shapes awaited them. Some made finally caught. Occasional was coming down the road from the characteristic choice of the in-|shots were audible and as the city Doiran, Ghevegheli and Tore, dependent Greek spirit; they re-|fell completely silent, illuminated by | straight for the ruptured end of te) fused both alternatives and went on |prilliant flames, the distant rever-| communications and, if reportsifighting. Evacuees say that the |peration of artillery began to be which returned to Salonika in the|fighting in the region is still con- |heard. vollev after volley. Already | evening were true, raking with fire|tinuing, the Germans having the | German motoreyelists who were Cars attempting to turn northwest- greatest difficulty ferreting out the [seen on Salonika streets at 4:15! ward to make their way around the expertly-harassing Greek bands. loclock Wednesday niorning Greek front. Those who chose to withdraw by | — es ee Refugees dropped their papier-!sea made a saga equivalent to Eng- | {mache suitcases, tied with string, |land’'s Dunkirk and testified that | [their clothing wrapped in bed linen seafaring Greeks have lost none of |

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MERCHANTS NATIONAL BANK THE OLDEST NATIONAL BANK IN INDIANAPOLIS MAIN OFFICE Washington and Meridian Streets BRANCH OFFICES

38th St. Massachusetts Ave.

Rrghiond 21 West 38th St.—815 Mass. Ave.—~2355%

Station St.

FOUNTAIN SQUARE STATE BANK

1050 Virginia Ave.

Members Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation