Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 8 July 1941 — Page 3
TUESDAY, JULY § 1041
‘NAZI SPEARHEAD BROKEN--MOSCOW
Soviet Communique Reports 8000 German Soldiers ‘Annihilated,” 35 Tanks Wiped Out and 58
German Planes
MOSCOW, July 8 (U. P.).
Downed in Day.
reported today to have blasted the German advance toward Moscow and the Ukraine with flank and counter attacks that wiped out two Nazi infantry regiments and a big tank spearhead in fierce fighting along the Stalin Line. The war communique said the Germans had failed and suffered huge losses in all attempts to cross the Dnieper River ond the central front, that the Red Army was striking
counter blows in the Lepel sector and in the Ukraine and that fighting continued fiercely and stubbor nly in other areas. German losses listed in the communique included two infantry regiments (probably 6000 men) annihiliated, two infantry battalions
(about 2000 men) destroyed and up- |
ward of 35 tanks wiped out. The Red air fleet downed 58 German planes and lost five, it added. The fighting on the 1800-mile front from the Arctic to the Black Sea was described as follows:
On the central front, the German drive on Moscow was firmly held on the Dnieper River front, with the German Army counter- attack on the heels of a/Russian counter-blow and fighting continuing. In the Ostrov sector the Russians said they were resisting stubbornly and had checked the German advance while fierce fighting was continuing in the Polotsk and Borkovich regions. “On the Bobruisk sector, where the biggest Nazi thrust has been made at the Dnieper the communique said that upward of 35 enemy tanks and two infantry battalions had been destroyed and all attempts to cross the river repulsed. On the southern front, the communique said an intensive tank battle was being waged in the Novograd Volynsk sector, about 120 miles from Kiev, but that south of that area Russian counter-blows had ripped the German rear flank and wiped out two infantry regiments. New German attempts to cross the Dniester River were said to have resulted in the wiping out of single enemy units, with fighting particularly severe in the vicinity of Mogilev 'Podolsk on the pre-war Ukraine border. On the northern front, Russian forces were reported stubbornly resisting German efforts to break through from Finland as well as to advance from the Ostrov sector on the south toward Leningrad and in the direction of Kandalaksha, on the White Sea south of Murmansk. Fighting was reported to be on a big scale in all areas. (The entire picture provided by the Russian communique was one in which Russian soldiers . were stoutly and successfully defending their lines against repeated bigscale German attacks, all the way from Esthonia to Rumania. Taken in conjunction with earlier communiques, there was no indication that the Germans were making any substantial progress. On the contrary, the implication was that the main German and Russian forces were now fully engaged and that the Germans so far had failed to find a weak spot anywhere along the 600-mile front.)
HOUSE AGAIN 0. K.’S MAUCKPORT BRIDGE
Times Special WASHINGTON, July 8. — Rep. John W. Boehne Jr. (D. Ind.) has: obtained passage by the House of ‘the Mauckport bridge bill for the second time, his office announced today. The measure ‘empowers the Indiana Toll Bridge Commission to construct a bridge over the Ohio at Mauckport. Previous passage of the, bill resulted in no action. It must again be approved by the Senate.
E. J. WYNN TO SPEAK BEFORE JR. C. OF C.
E. J. Wynn, head of the local FBI office, will be the principal speaker at the Junior Chamber of Commerce luncheon at the Columbia Club tomorrow noon. At a meeting of Junior Chamber officers last night, Lyman G. Hunter was named executive vice president to fill the balance of the term of Maynard R. Hoanson, who is on extended leave of absence. John C.
CLAIM VICTORY IN BESSARABIA
Germans Say Russians Have Been Driven Back To Dniester River.
and Rumanian troops broke stubborn Red Army resistance on the Bessarabian front and drove the enemy back to the Dniester River, the official news agency reported today. The agency’s report on fighting on the southern front was issued after the German High Command communique, which said merely that operations against Russia were continuing “according to plan.”
reported using all military means in a grand-scale attack designed to widen a reported break in the Stalin Line. Aimed at Kiev
(It was indicated strongly that the alleged breach in the Stalin Line was made in the Volhynia region, east of Luck on the Ukrainian front. The Nazi official news agency said yesterday that German troops advancing in Volhynia had broken through the Stalin Line at several places and continued to advance eastward. This would imply that the Stalin Line lay a considerable distance west of its presumed situation.) In regard to the fighting in the south, the agency said that ‘“despite obstinate” Soviet resistance the Germans and Rumanians had captured 20 pill-boxes and many field positions. Captured war material included 584 tanks, several armored trains and 55 guns, the dispatch reported. (Budapest reported that the Germans had smashed across the Dniester River into the Ukraine and were pursuing Whe Red Army forces.) The official news agency reported that “durnig pursuit of retreating Soviet forces” German troops took more than 142,000 prisoners between July 2 and July 5. (Previously German statements had claimed about 300,000 Russian prisoners.) Commenting on the progress of the German spearhead in the “breach” region, apparently aimed at Kiev, capital of the Ukraine, the German press said that the. main weight of the attack was being extended in the Luck-Lwow area. It was said that the co-ordinated movement of German, Hungarian and Rumanian troops was beginning to shake the entire Russian southern front.
Report Reinforcements
German newspapers said Russia was pouring men into the Stalin Line. “They realize that between the line itself and the Ural mountains (1400 miles away) there is virtually nothing of a military nature to hinder our attack,” one story said. German informants said they believed the Russians had only 25 divisions of troops, perhaps 375,000 men, between the Volyhnia area and the Urals.
8 COUNTY DRAFTEES TO REPORT THURSDAY
Eight registrants from Marion County Local Board 5 were ordered today to prepare for induction into the Army at Ft. Harrison on Thursday. Registrants ordered to report are David W. Ayers, 722 N. Pershing Ave.; Torvald J. Holmes, 1745 Lafayette Road; Robert B. ‘Reynolds, 3301 W. 11th St.; Carl Hayes, 729 E. 11th St. John F. Turk, 2615 W. Walnut St.; Joe B. Nelson, 1536 N. Rural St.; Emmett A. Dewey, 558
Appel was named secretary to take Mr. Hunter's place.
N. Tremont St, and Reva L. Watson, 1401 N. Holmes Ave.
—The Red Army was officially
BERLIN, July 8 (U. P.)—German |
The Germans previously had been”
If starlet Jane Frazee fills the ‘leading role in the new film “Hellzapoppin” as well as she fills a crazy quilt bathing suit, she'll do * all right in pictures.
ARMY WILL ASK LARGER FORGE
300,000 More Men in Active Service Goal of New Program.
WASHINGTON, July 8 (U. P.).— The Army soon will ask Congress fully to equip an active force of 1,725,000 men — 300,000 greater than the present strength—and to provide reserve planes, tanks, guns, ammunition and other materiel for a projected force of 3,000,000, it was learned today. Officials said that the proposal is under consideration of the Budget Bureau and will be ready for presentation to Congress within a few days. The program will entail a supplementary appropriation of $4,000,000,000. The existing plan has projected a force of 1,418,000 enlisted men by July 1 with necessary equipment for a reserve force of 2,000,000. The new weapons are expected to be delivered by the end of 1942. The increase, it is said, will provide 152,000 additional enlisted men in the Air Corps to man 50,000 airplanes already voted. The program envisages training pilots at the rate of 30,000 per year instead of the current 12,000, and increasing the number of technicians in training from 45,000 to 110,000 annually. The Air Corps now has a total of 167,600 men of whom 6500 are pilots. Additional men also will be needed to fill gaps in continental units created by diversions to strengthen defenses in Alaska, Panama, Puerto Rico, Hawaii, and the newly aequired Atlantic bases. Further manpower will be needed in the projected organization of probably four new armored divisions, which would double existing tank forces, and for the formation of 22 new tank defense battalions.
ane Si SHOT FATALLY IN FIGHT Daniel Walker, 56, of 644 Bright St., was shot fatally today during a fight at Indiana Ave. and Bright St. Police held. Joseph Smith, 45, of 642 Bright St., on charge of mur-
der in connection with the shooting.
IN INDIANAPOLIS
Here Is the Traffic Record County City Total 29 37 66 32 ~ Accidents ... 28 | Injured MONDAY TRAFFIC COURT Cases Convic- Fines tried tions paid . 38 36 $41 Reckless driving 3 3 6 Failure to stop at through street 13 11 Disobeying traffic signals 16 Drunken driving 1 All others
Totals .....
MEETINGS TODAY
Ohio Oil Co., Hotel Washington, noon. Portland Cement oT tiation, Hotel Washington, 7:30 p
12 1 24
..109 81
rican PLE Bg i Jyorkers for the |
Blind, Ciayponl Hotel, Ro tary ub, bor H Ja. noon. Gyro Club, Spink-Arms Hotel, noon. Apartment inka Association of Indianapolis. Hotel Washington, noon. Mercator Club, Hotel Lincoln, noon. niversal Club, Columbia Club, noon. Phalanx Fraternity, Y. C. A, 7:30
"Knights of Columbus, K. of C. Clubhouse, noon Sutdoor Novena, Carmelite Monastery,
MEETINGS TOMORROW
4 John Hancock Life Insurance Co., Hotel . Washington, 9 a Kiwanis Club, nis Club, erican Association of Workers On the Blind, Clavpool Hotel, all da ay. Lions Club, Claypool Hotel, Indiana Motor Truck tiation. Hotel Hers, Joon. 7: 52 . A. Camera Club, Y¥. M. C. A.
a ~ 2 Youne Jlen’s Discussion Club, Y. M. C. Co-operative Cl ol Sh . ub of Indianapolis, Co
Indianapolis Junior Chamber of Commerce, Canary Cottage, noon
BIRTHS
Girls Paul, Alta Cooksey, at St. Francis. Cecil, Marjorie Carnine, at St. Francis. Arnoid, Stela Eggerding, at St. Francis. Everitt, Reba Bunch, at City
homas, Frances Reidy, at St. Vincent's. Harry. Velma Wampler, at St. Vincent's. Lowell, Emily Smith, at St. Vincent's. Richard, Virginia Earle, at St. Vincent's. Sibert, Lola Mae Milligan, at Methodist. Frank, Ruth Garinger, a ethodist. Kenneth. Luella Schultz, at Methodist. Ralph. h 1 hodist.
at N. Rural. Paul. Roma Monroe, at 521 N. Gladstone. Boys William, Wilhelmina Simpson, at Colem
an Odos, Eva Hatton, at Coleman Charles, Frances Robinson, x ‘St. Vincen Robert, Mary Tudor, at St. Vincent's. Joseph, alice Bryan, at Methodist. R. G., e Good, at Methodist. ge liam, *Elizabeth Waldon, at 919 E.
DEATHS
Emma Blackburn, 74, at 807 Coffey, carcin Helen, okey, 46, at St. anoxem William Bacon, 87, at 729 N. Wallace, carcinoma. James W. Powell, 35, at City, carcinoma. Theodore Tschaegle, 71, at 1305 S. Belmont, carcinom John Steffey. aa, at 5872 Julian, coronary occlusion. Margaret Foster, 13, at Riley, sarcoma. Robére Donaldson, 5, at Riley, brain
tum Lila Birt, 73, at 961 Edgemont, chronic
hepht ritis. i tella Massena, 57, at Long, hyperten- | son: | Anna Jennings, 63, at St. Vincent's,
Rephiy riti lia Stader, . 55, at 142 E. Ohio, carcinoma.
: Precipitation 24 hrs endin
Vincent's, | Chic
OFFICIAL WEATHER
4 /U. S. Weather Bureau
INDIANAPOLIS FORECAST: Fair today, tonight and tomorrow; somewhat warmer tomorrow. (Central Standard Time) Sunrise 4:23 Sunset : TEMPERATURE —July 8, 1940— ase 6ilp.m ....... 85 BAROMETER TODAY
y a.m... Total precipitation since Deficiency since Jan.
MIDWEST Sei Indiana—Generally Jair Jonight and tomorrow; warmer tomor Illinois—Generally fair night and tomorrow; warmer tomorrow . Lower Michi gan—Fair, slightly warmer in north Dor tonight; tomorrow partly cloudy and warmer. Ohio—Fair and somewhat cooler tontght; tomorrow fair with moderate temperature. KenunckyFair tonight and tomorrow; cooler tonight.
Stations Weather Amarillo, Tex. .....
Bismarck, N.
0 .. Cincinnati Cleveland Dodg e City, Kas. . Jacksonville, Fla. Kansas City. Mo. Little Rock, Ark. Los Angeles Mle 25t. ail pls.- au Mobile, Ala. New Orleans New
§ ar Crull, 54, at Veteran's, myocardial insudicienty, - y Wi
WEATHER IN OTHER CITIES, 6:30 A. M. Bar. Temp. 30.02 64
CONGRESS SPLIT
ON ICELAND ACT
Majority Expected to Back Roosevelt, but Some Are Critical. -
WASHINGTON, July 8 (U. P.) — Congressional reaction to President Roosevelt’s announcement of the occupation of Iceland inclued some sharp criticism today. Gen. Robert E. Wood, national chairman of the America First Committee, said Mr. Roosevelt should decide now “whether to go into the war as an active ally of England or stay out.” German officials in Berlin are expected to comment later today. Congressional supporters of Administration policy and some middle-of-the-road men such as Chairman Walter F. George (D. Ga.) of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, and Senator Arthur H. Vandenberg (R. Mich.) supported the Administration move. There was no indication that the Iceland incident would lack majority support on Capitol Hill in numbers wholly satisfactory to Mr. Roosevelt. Congress’ opportunity to express its opinion will come with consideration of the President’s request for authority to exchange diplomatic - representatives with Iceland, now recognized informally as an independent state. He ordered naval forces into the island on his authority as commander-in-chief. House leaders promised early action on the request for a diplomatic exchange.
‘Necessary,’ Says Pepper
“The President says he’s going to keep the sea lanes open to Iceland,” said Rep. Dewey Short (R. Mo.). “If Iceland’s in the Western Hemisphere, so are Spitzbergen and Zanzibar, and I'm a Chinaman,” said Rep. Dewey Short (D. Mo.). “It was a necessary, defensive measure,” said Senator Claude Pepper (D. Fla.). “It is clear that the United States is acting only as trustee to preserve and protect Iceland. It is like occupying bridges over the. Atlantic. I hope we hold ourselves in readiness to occupy the Azores, the Cape Verde Islands and the Madeira Islands if the President finds evidence that Hitler is going to take them. “I think,” said Speaker Sam Rayburn, “that the President’s action in Iceland, Trinidad and Britis Guiana was vitally necessary to ind defense of the United States and the Western Hemisphere.”
‘Back Door to War'—Nye
“A complete evasion of the right of Congress alone to declare war and tantamount to a declaration of war,” said Rep. Frank Hook (D. Mich.). “It is an effort to enter the war by the back door,” said Senator Gerald P. Nye (R. N. D.), ‘expressing fears that if the United States should relieve British troops in Iceland, we might begin relieving them “in Africa and every quarter of the earth.” Senator Burton K. Wheeler (D. Mont.), who last week predicted that Iceland would be occupied on July 23 or 24, said “It will not be long before our troops are occupying the Cape Verde Islands, Dakar and the Azores.” Senator Vandenberg, who did not object to occupying Iceland “defensively,” expressed uneasiness because the occupation “was preceded by an unrepudiated statement by Navy Secretary Frank Knox which might indicate the use of Iceland for totally different and unacceptable purposes.”
‘Exceeded Authority’—Taft
“I think the President has grossly exceeded his constitutional authority,” said Senator Robert A. Taft (R. O.). “This step has taken us 1000 miles nearer to a shooting war,” said Senator John A. Danaher (R. Conn.). Senate Majority Leader Alben W. Barkley (D. Ky.) endorsed the occupation. Senator Joseph F. Guffey (D. Pa.) said he was for it, “of course,” and Chairman Sol Bloom of the House Foreign Affairs Committee said: “There was nothing else the President could do under the circumstances.”
"THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
Iceland Occupied to “Keep Sea Open”
PAGE 3
&
Bay
U. NEW YORK 3 Zan o* oo!
+ ORIGINAL *° NEUTRALITY PATROL
This map shows the probable extension of Unified States patrols as a result of the landing of American forces in Iceland. It also shows the route by which American-built fighter planes will be able to fly to Great Britain; previously they had to be taken across in ships.
U. S. Closer to War Than Ever Before, Italy Warns
ROME, July 8 (U. P.).—Responsible Italian quarters today termed United States occupation of Iceland an “actual intervention” in European waters and said it probably would result in Axis-American incidents because it would not cause the Axis to relax its blockade of the British Isles.
LONGER ARMY TERM OPPOSED
Won't Be Added Now to Draft Act, Says McCormack.
WASHINGTON, July 8 (U. P.).— Congressional leaders indicated today that statutory restrictions on use of National Guardsmen and selectees outside the Western Hemisphere will not be repealed unless President Roosevelt strongly urges such action. They expressed a similar attitude toward another proposal which would authorize the President to retain both the guardsmen and selec-
tees in training tor more than a year. Both steps were recommended by Chief of Staff George C. Marshall as necessary precautions against “the coldly calculated, secret and sudden action that -might be directed against us.” House Majority Leader John W. McCormack (D. Mass.) saw no possibility of Gen. Marshall's recommendations being offered as amendments to the Selective Service Revision Bill which the House considers tomorrow. The bill was to have come up today, but the House adjourned because of the death of Rep. Stephen Bolles (R. Wis.).
Connally Plan Modified
The measure would defer automatically men who were 28 years of age or older on July 1. Anticipating Congressional approval, the Selective Service already has instructed its local boards to defer men of this classification. The bill also contains a modification of a Senate amendment by Senator Tom Connally (D. Texas), which would have given the President authority to exert military force to halt defense work stoppages. The House version would authorize the President to use armed forces to protect non-striking defense workers and define as sabotage use of violence to maintain strike picket lines. Employers would be required to use existing mediation machinery in labor disputes.
FILE $72,000 CLAIM LOGANSPORT, Ind. July 8 (U. P.).—Mr. and Mrs. William Adams filed a $72,000 claim yesterday against the estate of Benjamin Long, prominent local attorney who died récently, charging that he failed to account for funds of a
trust.
Text of Roosevelt Message On Iceland Occupation
WASHINGTON, July 8 (U. P.).—The text of the President’s special message to Congress relating to the occupation of Iceland was as fol-
lows:
"I am transmitting herewith for the information of the Congress a message I received from the Prime Minister of Iceland on July 1, and the reply I addressed on the same day to the Prime Minister of Iceland in response to this message. In accordance with the understanding so reached, forces of the United States Navy have today arrived in Iceland in order to supplement, and eventually to replace, the British forces which have until now been stationed in Iceland in order to insure the adequate defense of that country. -
As I stated in my message to the
1." Congress of Sept. 3 last, regarding
the acquisition of certain naval and air bases from Great Britain in exchange for certain over-age destroyers, considerations of safety from overseas attack are fundamental. The United States cannot permit the occupation by Germany of strategic outposts in the Atlantic to be used as air or naval bases for eventual attack against the Western Hemisphere. We have no desire to see any change in the present sovereignty of those regions. Assurance that such outposts in our defense frontier remain in friendly hands is the very foundation of our national security and of the national security of every one of the independent nations of the New World. For the same reason substantial forces of the United States have now been sent to the bases acquired last year from Great Britain in Trinidad and in British Guiana, in the south, in order to forestall any pincers movement undeftaken by,
Lhe Western!
Hemisphere. It is essential that Germany should not be able successfully to employ such tactics through sudden seizure of strategic points in the South Atlantic and pe the North Atlantic.
Germany would constitute a serious threat in three dimensions: The threat against Greenland and the northern portion of the North American continent, including the islands which lie off it. The threat against all shipping in the North Atlantic. The threat against the steady flow of munitions to Britain—which is a matter of broad policy clearly approved by the Congress. It is, therefore, imperative that the approaches between the Americas and these strategic .outposts, the safety of which this country regards as essential to its national security, and which it must therefore defend, shall remain open and free from all hostile activity or threat thereof.
As Commander-in-Chief I have consequently issued orders to the Navy that all necessary steps be taken to insure the safety of communications in the approaches between Iceland and the United States, as well as on the seas between ‘the United States and all other strategic outposts. This Government will insure the adequate defense of Iceland with full recognition of the independence of Iceland as a sovereign state. In my message to the Prime Minister of Iceland I have given the people of Iceland the that the American forces sent there would in no way interfere with the internal and domestic affairs of that country, and that immediately upon the termination of the present international emergency all American forces will be at once withdrawn, leaving the people of Iceland and their Government in
full and sovereign control of their own ferrifory,
Atlantic
The occupation of Iceland by|
assurance| .
REYKJA
GODTHAAB
GERMAN BLOCKADE ZONE
PROBABLE EX. TENSION OF U. S. PATROLS
oLo OF WESTERN: " HEMISPHERE
Ocean
Virginio Gayda, Italian editor,
American forces on the European continent would “be all that is necessary United States into the catastrophe.”
definitely to thrust the
The purpose of the occupation,
other quarters said, was to create a vast zone in which vessels carrying supplies for Britain could navigate safely and, in effect, amounted to actual convoying since bring the United States Navy into the German blockade area.
it would
The ‘“‘so-called” American safety
belt, they observed, started as a 300-mile zone and then expanded to 1250 miles, “although this was contrary to all concepts of international law.”
The Iceland occupation, they de-
clared, will not be considered as another extension of the safety belt, but rather as “actual intervention in European waters.”
This is the first time the United
States actually has occupied territory regarded as being part of Europe, these quarters said, and brings
STRAUSS SAYS:
220 A20RES
D
AFRICA
commented today that landing of
the United States closer to conflict with the Axis powers than ever before. Responsible quarters said President Roosevelt has assumed grave responsibility for future events by “interfering in the blockade zone” and asserted Germany and Italy had made it clear that they regarded Iceland a part of the Axis counter-blockade area against Britain. Occupation of Iceland, they said, could in no way be construed as being “aimed to prevent invasion of the Western Hemisphere” since “the Axis has no intention of invading it.”
NAZI U-BOAT SUNK
LA LINEA, Spain, July 8 (U. P.). —British bombers were reliably reported today to have sunk an enemy submarine with depth charges off
R.A, F. BOMBS | 3 REICH CITIES
Big Sweep Over France Follows Heavy Raids On Germany.
LONDON, July 8 (U. P.) —British planes made a big sweep over Oce cupied France today after spreading destruction during the night over a wide area of industrial Germany, They rained bombs on eight impore tant German towns, and bombed key targets on the Netherlands, Belgian and French invasion coasts,
Big formations of British Coastal
-|Command planes passed over thas
Dover Strait at the breakfast hour to raid German airdromes and to bomb an important synthetic ofl plant between Lens and Bethune near the Belgian-French border.
Waves of bombers and fighters swept across the English Channel hour after hour this morning and observers on the coast said it was the biggest early morning daylight sweep of the war. The Air Ministry asserted that British fighters shot down seven German fighters and admitted ‘the loss of five British fighters and one bombing plane.
Nazis Admit Damage
The German High Command claimed that 28 British planes have been shot down by Nazi fighters and ground guns in the last 24 hours, but admitted “considerable destruce tion,” all of it in residential areas, London admitted that nine bombe ers were lost in the unusually heavy. and unusually successful raid on Germany and occupied territory during the night, one of the heave jest raids ever staged against Gere many. Cologne, Osnabrueck, Muenchen Gladbach, Frankfort - am - Main, Muenster, Duesseldorf, Duisberg and Krefeld, all important to German war industry, were the targets. The Bomber Command planes also raided Den Helder, the big Nether lands naval base, Amsterdam, Os« tend, submarine base on the Bel« gian coast, and Dunkirk and Boul« ogne, on the French invasion coast, Germans Raid Southampton
The Germans made one of their few recent raids of any strength on Great Britain during the night. The air and home security mine istries announced that substantial damage was inflicted in a sharp German attack on Southampton, Fires were started but were cone trolled, the ministries said. Casual« ties were believed not to be heavy, although some persons were killed, Five German planes were shot down. Aviation quarters said the Gere man raid was sharp rather than heavy. There had been a similar raid on South Wales on the night of July 4. The last big-scale Gers: man raid was that on London
Gibraltar.
May 10.
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