Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 17 April 1941 — Page 5
THURSDAY, APRIL 17, 1041 THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
TRIBE, BREWERS She's % Todey HINT SCHRICKER 700.000 Bombs Devastate Thirsty Nazis Drain Tanks) 10 PLAY AT 2:30 WO 3 FOR , S, SENATE London n War S Worst Raid, that gave Oc Cop oe vores of the Srl
«uk. | retreat and the Ge § (Continued from Page One) their first setback around Tobruk, | Bh i rman advance |
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|85 miles west of Egypt. They had) Since then, according to all re-| |
Killefer Brothers, Wade and | JE \ ll VanNuys' Week-End Chat there was nothing to indicate that any new types had come on without pause, over hun-|ports, Tobruk has held out and the||k Bill. Confident of Sg With Governor Linked to ‘been used. dreds of hot miles, in an exhibition| garrison has‘ hampered the enemy | |
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Great explosive bombs and thousands of fire bombs came of what they used to call German i cas | | p e bombs ca (relentlessness. In the course of this| ft flank, breaking up communica- ||
1944 Ambitions. down from hundreds of bombing planes. Stuka and Junker|griv : (tions and lines of supply now in-| gp (drive, they cut in behind El Megheli| oreasingly needed by the advance
(Continued from Page ORE) dive bombers dived down in face of anti-aircraft gun fire. | rel 8 Li oy risyspect- units in front of Solum, a few miles | A Good Watch . Some German planes swept in under the barrage bal-| nent was well on i S8 WOVE™ inside the Egyptian border. || di “" rT | A 'fusal to accept his offer. This will : : ‘ [nen WAS Selon HS Way, with a one worries, hereabouts, about | | fg for the Youn anapolis, George Blacholder for| : be the Governor's first all-out poli- {loons and, almost skimming roof tops in some areas, dropped |thick sandstorm to veil it. [the possibility of Tobruk being coms | | ng Milwaukee. | tical speech since taking office and| their bombs. In the intervals between explosions, those on. The British officers accepted the| pletely cut off by land. The defense | | [5 GRADUATE
|advance by incessant raids on its|| Victory.
(Continued from Page One)
Tall and rangv and wise in thel 3 {he still is working on the manu- . Suds ‘ situation with seeming resignation. forces can easily get out bv if | profestion. ihev naturally take Keen| seript. ‘the ground heard the air whistling through their struts They siarieq to unload their they want to, but Apres her Rost offers for Your SepHde i their opening Gay assign< X | ‘The fireworks of other Democratic with an ear-splitting shriek.) but instead bd wna ten Her! oon — to. | of 'N tionally: F Wa kai wil dey debbain y TAN ul) | editoris i | aca: i { - oS viously, there i i a ally amous ments, coveted by all pitchers, | ERY i SE nE~ Sah As oe eT | British fighter planes could | * Breer of the Bank of Sngland, guards ne Sigappenred instantly in the offing. But at ale makes in Indiana: Receiving for In- if ) aa wR practically was read out of the be heard, their machine guns |? ser on economic oe hation into or st og to the north. They | nobody is willing to guess when or Hamil : sohnnv Pass | i \ ; party by Governor Townsend, will|plazing they ht ¢ [to the Cabinet and chairman of the got to Sh ruk well in advance of where. You probably will not have | amilton Elgin also a veteran and for the Brewers. | (SUSNRNT SEA Se ME be missing. azing; as ey Sought ou | London Midland & Scottish Rail-| NY Aer communication and long to wait to find out, however, || Bulova Gruen Bob Carharl aie Erane what iro POTRRE RMT LEI Sr | . _ g the German craft, and the|,, I ————— Ob Garbark, who knows what it's| Mrs. Velma Offri os | Friend of VanNuys Now é. mb y. ! all about. too Mrs. Velma rNgA . + + «© : thunder of the anti-aircraft! One of the most powerful figures) The ny ane WAVE hob Ma ROME years young today. It was after that session that Mr. ia the “City” of London, he was a | 1 ndians have not lost a hot . : |
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VanNuys started his campaign to QUNS never ceased. leading “appeaser” during the War I \oves Today
opener for nine ars and p i ihe ce nie ql abot Ue, | 3 = = beat the Frank McHale-Paul Me- | The alarm sounded a little after | Chamberlain ministry and was one (Continued from Page One) But do you think the Cream City. Mrs. Offringa. Beech Grove, NU't faction and wound up a Win-'g9 glock last night and the “all{of Hitler's guests at Nuremburg in| bovs are hottied Ge that stieaks Or g . » ner when the machine indorsed him | deat Iv little b 5 | September, 1938. Lady Stamp, the! or | oy nd Dettled by that streak? R i ¢ R E it d shortly before the convention. clear” came only a little before § former Olive Rent. was president of | the British fleet can concentrate its|than«twice as long as to Tripoli | IVadere A oi y they etuses (0 be cxcite | Mr. Schricker : rays. | this morning. Tati TTY ; ; | Major activities in the Middle Medi- from the nearest Itali ¢ _ invaders. Mr. Schricker, at that time Lieu Désbite. Weigh the attack: BY the National Free Church Women's|iarranean. When that situati « : st Italian embarka- 17-Jewel HAMILTON The law verages is going to | Over Birthday [tenant Governor, had been pressed| ¢SPI'€ weight of the attack, by. council. [vails, the turn of the ae on pre tion centers. The British on evacuat- | | ]\} A Superb Timepiece $31.50 catch up with the Indians today.” | : linto the race against the Senator |Mid-afterncon the city had been| 1 was feared that the Hon. W.!.ome to understand AW an. 08 Benghazi, said the number of || said Pilot Bill Killefer of the Br | Tt was quite an exciting day at bY the McHale group. He gladly (restored to SOE re Ea Carlyle Stamp, son and heir of Lord | jng of sea power and its vel Sinker yessals in the berber made! ers the offringa residence in Beech Withdrew and now is on the friend- | “normal for war-time in a mop. | Stamp. also had been killed. He influence on the ending of the ay it useless for shipping. Incidentallv if 1 haven't read Grove todav. That iS. everyone was lest of terms with Mr. vanNuys, [O'S Bu jected to repeated bomb ,.4 heen living with his parents. ERE : + | The Germans and Italians in ntal if | wven't res 3 toda) That is, \ as Already, the moderately strength- North Africa will require a continual | |
; : attacks the papers or listened in on the excite ‘ce < Vel noe Two vears later, the McHale-Mec-| Dt ; : tic ; radio og ame clash o extited Ft iy elma on rn Nutt-Townsend faction turned| Debris had been swept out of Crooner Is Killed ened British squadron in the supply of oil, above all other neces- | | aqlo, toqay s aiamd clash ¢ 1 Today was Mrs. C ringa S J38thn 4 a A ALE 3 ‘ roadwavs. sidewalks were cleared . i ; . [Middle Mediterranean has begun to sities, for long sustai d ‘ati : 1 . : y to fe >. aside from birthadv and she spent it just as against Mr. Schricker in his cam- MG Lord Auckland, 46-year-old flight : S, g sustained operations. | | 15-Jewel GRUEN, $24 15 ) ] .
I nat : : . oy ; { i : |disrupt the German overseas | \ . . . 3 the performance of the ball players, she did any other day in the year, baign for the Governorship. ant pYamme jams Nereons auéued un | lieutenant in the Royal Air Force, Serr When that eth Si ju there are three German mecha-} Ray! New Snape, a "Battle of the Killefers.™ talking to her 88-year-old husband,|{ But he won an early and over-|n€ uses v Sq wd 6 Killed. A thers d doubled. as it will be fui = nize visions in North Africa as | for late afternoon performances and | Was also Kilie mong others dead y A € sooner or later, has been reported, that means 1200 PAY WEEKLY
Rig brother Wade the Indians’ John Offringa, and playing with whelming convention victory and hej : : 5 oad x u . hier nd brother Reindeer Bill |4-year-old Gertrude Hollander was the only Democratic candidate in the West End suburbs house- | was Al Bowlly, a well-known dance the Nazi supply line in North Africa [to 1500 tanks, 150 armored cars, be- || € OR MONTHLY!
ave to foreet their kinship and go! Mrs. Offringa and her husband | for State office elected last Novem. Wives crowded the stores as usual, yang crooner. io ered, As Was the Italian side motorcycles, motorized artillery | BN No Carrying Charge! overboard in the art of master (live at 1328 Albany St. in Beech ber. |looking for bargains. The German pianes rained their] Tp . 5 ~|and trucks for infantry, a total of || vying emIge; Grove. With them are living Dock On taking office, Governor Six Planes Downed bombs indiscriminately over Greater 1e task of the British Mediter- [vehicles for approximately 18,000 : 2 . i at BWR og [TR SETA Te ; on S S . ranean Fleet in cuttin ff Axis | men, . baseball | Hollander, his wife Teni and their Sc hricker began a purge of McHale ; London. the Thames Estuary ais= |e / 4 g 0 xis | sve been informe for ea oral daughter followers and only a few remain, How many Nazi planes concen- tricts and the countryside around supplies destined for North Africa| The oil requirements for power re een IIe a A ali The families are not related but] Base Also Quit McHale | trated on London last night was not Roe Le ae Ye NY, of should be comparatively simple and lubrication are enormous for here today. Brief pre-same cere- Mis. Hollander cooks for thej es : {known. At least six of the raiders different type than the big fire raid When the pressing necessities in such an army. The distance from monies will be held. consistin At 4 Offringa’s and sees that things are! State Chairman Fred Bays also | were brought down by the pounding oh the “city” December 29. That Greek waters are finished. A block- | Tripoli to the present battle front || flag raising an An Lecion Made comfortable for them broke with the McHale group and anti-aircraft batteries and night)". ieq only about three hours [serious oomiiiorica should offer no along the Egyptian frontier is more | colo 4 that Both families are from the Neth- dissolved the Two Per Cent Club. | fighter planes and two more were! 4 the Germans dropped almost 6 sel ious complications because Tripoli {than 800 miles and all supplies must | | Bi | E $ : ball pitch. by ernar Hoan erlands. Mrs, Offringa has been in campaign fund-raising organization |shot down this morning when they ox JoSive . bombs Topp time they is the sole port open to the Ger- be transported across desert terrain. || . ER Schricker. with Mavor Reeinal "| this country 45 years and Mrs. Hol- set up by that faction. This gives|crossed over the Dover Straits. pred everything they had, n= mans. : : | There are no natural sources of | AE TERE DFE Sullivan oh the receiving en lander 10 years the VanNuyvs-Schricker combination Almost everyone in London ne the “Molotov bread basket” It is possible that some Axis ships |oil in North Africa nor are there] Batter 4 ; Despite her age, Mrs. Offringa control of all party posts except na-|Seemed convinced that the Luft-| og re of aml diary |Teht try to reach Benghazi, al-|faciories for the production of vital ol : ie Istill can read and get around the tional committeeman, now held by|Waffe would attempt to repeat its|con 1 ni of sma ncendiary though the travel distance is more war supplies. BURIAL TOMORROW house. She can't speak English, Mr. McHale, who managed Paul attack tonight. Citizens were tak- bombs. Ee ————————————————————— Rs H however, and anything that is said McNutt's unsuccessful drive for the|ing the same precautions they took | Many Are Jobless FOR JAMES H. COX © her must be done through Mrs. Presidential nomination. [during the blitzkrieg months of last | : foci) . Mr. McHale still has a large fol- | September and October. !{ In Londons fashionable West
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Hollander, who acts ag interpreter ‘ 3 Por Mrs. Offringa has seven children lowing and any moves to oust him! Many who had ceased going to End shopping district today, thou-
meral services and rial will jivine here and her room in the are far in the future. Instead, the shelters because of the slackening of | sands of men and women stood in| ; A] “4 LL y 4 eld in Greencastle tomon Beech Grove home was filled with party is maintaining a solid front|Nazi attacks on London prepared the glass-strewn streets looking at ) . 4 ha Aad thats Tui e | to go underground again. Hun-|the places where they had worked. J ® LE ® c ike Ph ®
_ flowers from relatives and friends while it concentrates on beating] : | : , who sent her congratulations the Republicans in their court fight | Qreds OF BE re Ct Crone To Sere out OF Joet. ; ‘ Naturally, she was pleased and over State patronage. But the be-| Pack 10 London ov S| A block away, the proprietor of a IS happy, but being 98 i ing to Pind the cornes ne ering and again left the city. ; | famous tailor shop was shaking glass ‘ELECTRICAL CITY'' — MONUMENT PLACE ST ORE get excited about, she thought tug-of-war goes on The raid reached ils peak in theifrom bolts of woolens. His chief " (early morning hours when the cutter, armed with a hammer, was waning moon appeared in a starry knocking out the remains of the sky. {window frames, The head salesman
It was impossible yet to estimate had taken off his tailed morning Rest Refrigerator Buy of the Year!
the casualties or the number of |coat and was manning the business
Y 1 1 Y 3 1 homeless but it seemed certain that|end of a broom. > + , ’ , ‘yp [|| i’ Ww ASSON A § 4) | the toll was high. A correspondent who had had NATIONALLY FAMOUS Oo ALITY! ; ” ” A Ys : . i | Lord Stamp, one of Britain's fore-| suits made there looked in and the!
most economists, and Lady Stamp/|proprietor called to him: “Come were among the dead. Lord Stamp, | back in an hour, sir, and we will be
H E L E C TRI 0 A L 0 | T Y "No M 0 N u M E N T P L A ¢ E S T 0 R k born Josiah Charles Stamp, was 81, ready to serve vou.”
British Repulse Nazi Tanks; Center of Greek Line Periled
(Continued from Page One)
railroad junction of Larissa and the Sixth Jugoslav Army was trap the British troops fighting |thought to be still in the field. The near Mt. Olympus. | Germans said the Fourth was | In North Africa, the British naval | broken at Zagreb, the Third in forces went into action again along | Macedonia, the Fifth at Nish and |the coast, bombarding the Axis | the First at Novisad. | troops at Ft. Capuzzo, on the Libyan| However, there were mounting infrontier, and blasting El Gazala air- [dications that despite the speed of | drome. The naval report issued by the German offensive in Jugoslavia the Admiralty in London said that the Nazi conquest was effected only much damage was done to German {with the fiercest fighting that the and Italian tanks and motorized [Nazi troops have encountered since columns, as well as supply dumps. |the start of the war. British headquarters at Cairo re-| According to some reports atported that another Axis attack on | tributed to German prisoners, the the besieged British forces at To-|Serbs fought back more fiercely bruk had been repulsed with many | than either the Poles or the French. casualties and that patrol raids| These accounts said that Serbian ininto the enemy lines had resulted | fantry repeatedly attacked German in capture of several hundred pris- | tanks, armed only with hand grenoners. ades. Both British and Greek reports Stories were told of instances in indicated that the Germans, hav-| which Serb death battalions leaped ing reduced Jugoslav operations to upon tanks and tossed grenades the mop-up stage, now are throw- through gun slits or emptied reing their full power against the volvers at the crew inside the ma-Greco-British defenses. chine. In most instances, it was said. Kalabaka is 175 miles northwest the Serbs fought until following of Athens, but it is the head of an| waves of tanks arrived and blasted extensive network of railroads which | them with heavy guns covers central and southern Greece The German night attack on LonTo the west the Germans and| don was described by the Nazis as a RR Italians were pounding down| reprisal for the big British attack i {through Albania and across the|on Berlin last April 9. Several | Greek frontier toward Kastoria, 30) hundred planes participated and miles southeast of Koritza. they were reported to have dropped | The Italo-German progress| 100000 incendiary bombs in addition | | through Albania was speeded by the | to huge quantities of high ex‘fact that Greek troops had to be] plosives. {pulled back from this front because| London veterans of last fall's of the threat that they would be blitzkrieg agreed that the attack | flanked by the Nazi thrust through |was the worst thé city ever had | | Bitolj Gap, Florina and on south, |been through. At the height of the The present line, it appeared, is|attack fires were started faster than | roughly V-shaped with the point|they could be dealt with by the delof the V just north of Kalabaka,| fending services and newspaper men | where the Germans have pene-|saw dead and injured lying in the |trated to the greatest depth in| streets. | Greece—about 70 miles from the| British planes blasted at the often | Jugoslav frontier. bombed port of Bremen for five German reports said that the hours last night. All day today the | crack-up of organized Jugoslav re-|R. A. F. attacked German airdromes | Model LB6C-}0 FL OTR [sistance had been accomplished |in North France, apparently in an | | with the surrender of the Second| effort to prevent recutrence of the Model DD2-41 | Jugoslay Army at Sarajevo. Only! London raid tonight.
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