Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 30 September 1942 — Page 4
as INTACT
nment - Not Expected
0 Heed Chamber's Plea For Break.
diplomatic relations with
» put into effect all resolutions :
by the emergency con-| |
nce of American foreign minlast January and lift the nanal state of siege. In fact, the deputies’ demands
§ Tegarded as the last time thel:
The a ution approved, 67 to 64 t night, a resolution by. Deputy ul Damonte Taborda, former n of the spmmittee inves- | anti-Argentine affairs, to ' diplomatic relations with the
They approved, 70 to 59, a resolution that Argentina put into efject the agreement reached by all e Amerjgcan nations at the emereucy erence of ministers in “Rio De Janerio.
SEEK PRISONERS’ NAMES
VICHY, Sept. 30 (U. P.)—The nited States embassy appealed to the Swiss government today to obiain the names of approximately 400 Americans rounded up in oc‘eupied France by German author-
Lawrence ond Warren Twps. ~ Dimout Tomorrow Night
(Continued from Page One)
alarm with a series of short blasts at 8 o'clock and 15 minutes later will’ blow the “all clear” with one long blast. Control centers will ‘be in Law-
high schools. All wardens and other workers were requested today to report there at 7 o'clock tomorrow night. About 600 are expeeted to participate in patroling the area. Ernest E. Lefforge is civilian de-
fense director for Lawrence town-
ities since last week and interred.
HTH IHRM IH
{ DOWNSTAIRS 22 AYRES
rence Central and Warren Central|.
ship, with Jack Thomas as chief air raid warden.’ In Warren township, B. L. Curry is defense director and Emmett Thompson chief warden. A dimout will be held tonight in district 10, bounded, by E. 10th st., north; English ave., south; the Belt railroad elevation, west, and Emerson aye., east. . District Warden Harold Brady said the dimout would start at 9:30 o'clock, with about 300 men on. patrol duty, i
Workers Meet Hour Before
The area’s control center will be located in school 88, where workers
| will meet an hour prior to the start
of the dimout. Warden Brady said that residents of the south side of E. 10th st.
€ | would not be affected by tonight's
dimout, since they were in included
in one staged by district 47.
Assisting Warden Brady are
Chester Martin, Herman Bobbe and
William Kreutzberger, division
E | wardens.
2| the corporation came to the street,
| supply which is adequate for a town
Districts 21 and 22,” which cover
| virtually all of southwest Indianapolis, held a practice dimout last
night. “If the rest of the city does as well. we'll be all right,” said Maj. Herbert K. Fletcher, chief city air raid warden, after a tour of inspection in the affected area.
Industries Co-operate
i:Mrs. Harry L. Schroeder, assistant warden 'of 21, reported splendid cooperation by industries in the area, Stewart-Warner doused. all outside lights, she reported, and officials of
offering assistance in patroling the district. Rallroad engines turned off their
2 | headlights, the stockyards was com-
pletely dimmed out and the AdamsRogers and Indianapolis Power & Light plants switched off their searchlights. : Warden William G. Johnson of district 22 said there were four vio lations in his area, but none of them serious.
RETIRED MINISTER: DIES GOSHEN, Ind. Sept. 30 (U., P). -—Dr. Harry Curtin Harman, 76, retired Methodist minister, died at his home here last night. He held pastorates at Richmond, Elwood, Ft. Wayne and Goshen before re-
fgaining more and more credence
1 Asks: ‘Bilon-Dollar ot
Fund, Levels Sarcasm At Enemies.
(Continued from Page One) |
4s nothing”
ond front.” ; “If Churchill says ‘he wants’ to let us worry about where and when a second front will be started,” said Hitler, “I ‘can only say: Mr,
.
Hitler said that “it I had
; Teen hu. C1 id. Gimin)
out ‘where a .second front’ might be
gram Tor 1002 yor to noid all : and ‘to attack where necessary’
show you what has been accomplished in these months.”
Outlines Achievements He outlined these as: 1. Securing the German position on the Black sea by eliminating the Russians at Sevastopol. 2. Preparation for the drive to the Don and defeat of a Russian break-through attempt in which, he said, 75 Russian divisions were destroyed. 3. A great offensive aimed at taking the last of Russia’s wheat lands,
communications route.
further goals, “but you will get clarity on that later.
Heinrich Himmler, He shook hands with Field Marshal Erwin Rommel, wearing the khaki uniform of the Nazi Afrika Korps. The 10,000 persons in ‘the audience cheered. Marshal Wilhelm Keitel, Nazi chief of staff, also was on the platform. Hitler said he was sorry that he was unable to appear more frequently in the sports palace “because I fear my speeches will not gel better, but rather worse, cause that needs practice.” - He said he had less time speeches “than my enemies” because he was “busy with acts and deeds” and what he had to say was being expressed each day in the achievements of the German troops. Goebbels Blasts Rumors Before Hitler spoke, Propaganda Minister Paul Joseph’ . Goebbels denied rumors that the Nazi regime
for
culties; He did not deny, however, the persistent rumor which is
that Field Marshal Fedor von Bock had been removed from the command of the Russian southern front. “It is below my dignity to comment on the ridiculous rumors of the BBC,” said Goebbels. “It would be ridiculous for me to deny their lies about-a palace revolution. - “None of our leaders is deathly sick in the hospital. None has been banned. None has been wounded or arrested.” “Nothing is more stupid than the British ‘claim that we are ourselves with victories,” said Goebbels. : “The greatest difficulties of our war effort have already been
overcome. “I ‘will not deny that: the past
tiring in 1930. He was an active minister for 50 years. :
Too Big
one ticket and those receiving the second highest fori another ticket. The general election decides which are -to "hold ‘office for ‘four-year terms,
the voters will be able to take part in the momination, since there are approximately 1000 in ‘Speedway City and the school gym seats only 500. +' Another headache is the wafer
of 2000 but is much’ too. small for the 30,000 who ‘use it every day.
War Makes Speedway City
(Continued from Page One)’
‘In 1943, ‘however, only a part of |
The water ‘comes from six wells an ax
22 Lpioblem
three years have confronted us with very hard tasks,” he said.
for Its Britches
Speedway streets are wearing out with no chance of replacements. The ‘school system accommodates about 300 pupils—more than 500 are ‘using it. Two days ‘before Pearl Harbor, they were notified they could build & $250,000 addition to the school. That's out. Seven classrooms have been built in the gym. In some rooms the bookcases have been removed to
of where to keep the fire department. apparatus, Now it is
emy's) eyes. 1¢ we get 65 or 70 per] cent of Russias iron, if we secure|
fe [ried De ed 8 {but added that “I {that we do not prephre.for 8
{Churchill, you never have. made me, : fear yet." A 3
good coal regions, oil and the Volga '§ He said he’could not speak ofS
Hitler was escorted into thelZ sports palace by Gestapo Chief|s
be- |B
was involved in any internal diffi<|§
LaVonne Andrews proudly displays the U.'S. maritime commission’s award to California Ship"building Corps workers at Termi-’ nal Island for building 73 Liberty ships in a year. The plaque will (bo reproduced i Juftan form.
| ToRPEDG PLANES HIT AXIS WARSHIPS
CAIRO, Sept. 30 (U. P.).—British naval torpedo-carrying planes yes-
‘terday scored a direct hit amidships on an enemy destroyer off Cape
Spartivento, at the southern tip of Italy, a joint British-American communique said today. Allied medium bombers last night again attcked shipping and port facilities at Tobruk and started fires, the communique said. Other night raiders successfully bombed Italian merchant vessels from a low level in the Ionian sea. During daylight yesterday allied planes attacked axis armored vehicles in the Egyptian battle area and shot down a Junkers-52,
Winter and Lavish
FUR!
SIZES for
lavish their fur collars!
{man falls wounded today, there is
| | which may save his life, Lieut. Col Ira Peak declared here today.
{the Red Cross was presented the
For Role in Supplying Blood Plasma. Wherever an American fighting
8 supply of blood plasma nearby
Col. Peak, attached to the Indiana university medical school, represented the undersecretary of war in ceremonies at the war memorial where the Indianapolis chapter of
army-navy “E” for operating a blood contributors’ center. , ‘Realized Need in Last War Honor guests were 17 persons who have donated blood five times and 116 who have donated four times. “We had known about blood plasma for many- years,” Col. Peak said. “Its need was felt greatly durifig the last war and many soldiers who might have returned are now in Flanders fields because less satisfactory .substitutes had ‘to be used. “When the present war was. approaching, the army and navy saw the need for building a vast store of plasma so that every man whose life could be saved would be saved.
Job Is Never Complete
“The fact that this supply is on hand, however, does not mean that the Red Cross’ job .is complete. Every time a transfusion is given, another unit of plasma t be ready and eur stores m enlarged daily. For who k /hat this war is going to bring. W. I. Longsworth, chapter. chairman, accepted the award. The Indianapolis blood donors’ center 1s
BR H i it \
| Presented Avy
Today’s disclosure
global struggle as
into effect one week after the lapse of that monopoly next January. Part of a general covering trade agreement between Turkey and Germany, which, when it was negotiated last November, was already interpreted as a. diplomatic setback for Britain, this new contract tallies one up for the Nazis. The next move is up to the allies. It is reasonable to assume that on his recent visit to Ankara Wendell Willkie talked chrome, along with other things. The ” have been clever enough’ to “stipulaté in the new agreement that no deliveries will be made until the Nazis have delivered the arms. That is on the basis of bitter experience of other countries with which the Nazis had trade agreements. Having got habitually behind in their payments, the Nazis invaded their creditors before the dunning became too tough and by getting direct control of sources eliminating the boring -detail of bookkeeping.
Nazis Need Metals
In Jugoslavia and Greece, the Germans got chrome deposits, but ones which required expensive working and which were less satisfactory than Turkey’s product. But Turkey is taking care that her debtor supplies her the arms first with which she may protect herself. Germany’s war production, despite Hitler's boast that the united nations never will overcome the
ks
‘|lead which his “European arsenal”
gave him, is weakened by Jperiodic raw material shortages. Among them metals, such as chrome,
one of 18 in the country.
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manganese, tungsten and vanadium,
ERE Ca
AYRES % DOWNSTAIRS © STORE
w
od calf} But each
their loveliest, ie
season and
and the Getman armaments firm of Krupp, providing for the ‘exchange of 45,000 tons of chrome for Nazi ‘arms, is an interesting sidelight on the bitter economic “warfare which is going on in as many sectors of this
military action.
EHTS 53 Dra on ta or war Taostey tad tise Purkish supply has long been jockeyed for between axis and united nations powers. The British have had a monopoly on it and the present contract is due to go
play a prominent part, Manganese is one of the things that makes the Caucasus so alluting a conquest to Hitler, for its shortage has threatened at times to®bring Ger many’s steel mills to a standstill. Synthetic substitutes, the plundering of conquered countries, the salvaging of supplies from civilian sources (including the confiscation of church bells this year, as in 1917) have relieved the préssure from time to time. In some instances, Hermann - Goering’s sharp-eyed super salesmen (at least one ‘of whom, Hellmuth Wohlthat, got some of his business training in the United States) have been able to gather in supplies from neutral countries, as in the present instance. But the production problem cone tinues. one of the real Nazi headaches.
84 EAGLE FIGHTERS ENTER U. S. FORCES
AT AN RAF AIRDROME, SOMEWHERE IN ENGLAND, Sept,
29 (Delayed) (U. P.)—Eighty-four American eagle fighter pilots entered their own country’s service today after battling the Nazi air force as volunteers with the royal air force for 18 months. In a simple ceremony, Air Mar= shal Sir W. Sholto Douglas, com-mander-in-chief, of the RAF fight er command, mustered them out of the RAF and Maj. Gen. Carl
Spaatz, head of U. 8. air forces in:
the European theater of war, mustered them into the American army.
A
