Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 12 November 1942 — Page 10
Tannibal s Ghost May
- Smile as Planes Blast Rome)
oe By Science Service ; WASHINGTON,’ Nov. 12—Hannial's ghost may presently stand grimly smiling on some Tunisian headland, watching B-17's and B-24s roaring northward to batter at the gates of the city that he -never quite succeeded in subduing
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|land, ‘not unlike parts of Texas,
Soon
—Rome. For Tunis, the modern city that stands near the site of
ancient Carthage, is the key to the!
whole central Mediterranean area. The coastline of North Africa juts sharply northwestward here,
before it falls off southward to the|
Gulf of Gabes and thence westsouthwest to Tripoli. An hour's bomber-flight to the northwest is
Sicily; a slightly longer hop will] ¢
take the planes to Naples. Only two long-range cannon-shots away is’ the heavily fortified island of Pantelleria, Italy’s “answer” to Malta. There may be a chance to pay off there for some of the pounding that Malta has had to take for the past couple of years. Eo -At last reports, American troops had not yet undertaken a landing at Tunis or nearby Bizerte. It may be that Gen. Eisenhower has decided on an overland march from Algiers, something over 400 miles to the west. “There is a good railroad, also highways along the coast. The country is not desert, but good, open, ‘cultivated hilly
with water enough to supply a considerable force on the march. - Beyond Tunis the region becomes progressively drier as the road runs south and west, and beyond Tripoli one runs into desolation such as that with which the British had to contend for months. But it should be possible to take Tunis and develop it as a center of great bombardment bases without anybody getting really thirsty. or going unwashed very long at a stretch. \Igeria, and the maqister ‘part of Tw? \ have long been for France a t and Cyrenaica once were for Imperial Rome—grainfield and garden to supply the crowded cities. France moved in on the northwest African coast about a century ago,
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IN ENGLAND these days, “double date, doesn’t always mean a social foursome; it may include two soldiers and only one girl The attention of David Low, famed British artist, was caught
A New octal Order i
by the sight of a pretty little WAAF arm-in-arming between a British Tommy and a U. S. private. “This,” said Low, as he sketched, “is real hands-across-~the-sea, stuff.”
School's ROTC Gets First Prize
WASHINGTON high school’s R. O. T. C. unit won first prize for marching excellence. in the Armistice day parade yesterday. The prize is offered each _year by the American Legion for the R. O. T. C. unit which makes the best showing in the parade. The marchers were judged on the basis of alignment in ranks, carriage of guns and general military bearing. This was the first time Washington has won the prize. Last year it went to Crispus Attacks high school. Sergt. John E. Boric is R. O. T. C. instructor at Washington.
EBERSTADT HEADS WPB CONSOLIDATION
WASHINGTON, Nov. 12 (U. P.)— Ferdinand Eberstadt today emerged from another streamlining of the war production board as the undisputed authority over determination of programs for distribution of war materials. effectuate powers which Eberstadt was awarded when he became vice chairman of WPB in charge of materials distribution, the office of program determination was consolidated with the office of operations. The two agencies become “the office of the program vice
chairman” under Eberstadt’s diréc-
tion.
Ernest Kenzler, son-in-law of
Edsel Ford, will continue as direc-
tor-general of operations. In announcing the realignment, WPB said it is designed to provide a closely knit organization to administer vital materials policies. The plan - calls for advancing 36 current industry branches to the status of divisions under individual directors.
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[SEN. JOHNSON
=
UPSETS ‘DOPE’
Democrat Is Over Popular Governor
Carr in Colorado.
By ROSCOE FLEMING Times Special Writer DENVER, Nov. 12. — This Edwin Carl Jonnson, who performed something of a political miracle by surviving a Republican storm in Colorado to nose out the popular and efficient = Republican = governor, Ralph L. Carr, and win a second
Re-elected |
land one U. S. Senator—EBEugene D. Millikin, who was originally ap-|,
plans thet had been-made for him|A" and insisted on campaigning in his own way, going elsewhere than he had been scheduled, and hand-
shaking instead of speechmaking.
a complete list of state officeholders, an overwhelmingly Republican
‘The Republican wave carried inf
legislature, a Republican governor
pointed by Governor Carr. But Mr. Johnson, instead of losing strength once he got outside the Democrat stronghold of Denver, held neck and neck with Mr. Carr. That told the story. Mr. Carr— whose friends had been visualizing him as a possible Republican vicepresidential candidate in 1944—goes
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. Governor Carr was riding a wave lof popular indignation against closing the gold mines, a wave of dissatisfaction with the progress of the war, a wave of dissatisfaction with rationing and with ‘“bureaucracy” in general.
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Senator Johnson didn’t get back
= i & OPEN MONDAY AND SATURDAY NIGHT TILL 9 O'CLOCK
Miners’ Leader suffers} Setback With Defeat Of Gov. Neely.
By FRED W. PERKINS Times Special Writer
‘CHARLESTON, W. Va., Nov. 12.—
is not a citizen of the state. His
pear on the ballot.
voters everybody else by emphatically dousing Governor Neely’s ambition to go back to the United States senate, they hit Mr. Lewis with the same haymaker. This could be the finisher for Mr. Lewis. He has taken a lot of hard ones in the last few years, and he doesn’t show his old resiliency..in the comeback. - Four. years ago it looked as if Mr.
well as of the U. M. W., seemed to
be headed for political control of a |Z zone including West Virginia and |S
Pennsylvania, with possible extensions into Ohio, Kentucky and other states.
Setback Began in ’38
year, in league with Senator Joseph PF. Guffey (®. Pa.), he tried to nominate his old U. M. W. associate, Thomas Kennedy, as Democratic candidate for governor of Pennsyl-
vania. afraid of his poss, who had begun to|= stir up real public fear as to his intentions when he countenanced the
industry. In 1940 Mr. Lewis allowed his dis- |S
Wendell Willkie. That led to his |S
Murray. without delay to solidify his sup-
Workers’ 110,000 members in the
thousands of state employees whom on & paying basis.
a beautiful thing to look at. trouble was that it began to fall apart. Again Sought Senate Then came this year, when Gov-
ernor Neely thought he might as well start back to the senate and
. [turn the governorship over to a
" | He denounced Rep. Andrew May (D.|&&
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ties. A congressional contests this year. He formally indorsed Rep. “Andy” Edmiston, of a West Virginia coalmining district, who was defeated.
Ky.), who won by a narrow margin.
was re-elected.
THE NEW GRANULATED SOAP
Med. Size Large Size Giant Size -
21 39°
W.VA, TURNS ON | JOHN L. LEWIS §
name, John L. Lewis, did not ap-|E For a dozen years there has been |S a Damon-and-Pythias relationship | == between the president of the United |S Mine Workers and. Governor Mat-| ==
thew Mansfield Neely. When the|SE surprised themselves and |S
Lewis, then head of the C, I. O. as
He stubbed his toe in 1938. That |S
sit-down strikes in the automobile 5 ul like of President Roosevelt to lead|S : him into a public indorsement of E =
retirement as president of the C. 1.|55 OC. and to his break with Philip | : El
When Mr. Neely moved into the = governor's office, work ‘was begun|=
port on a permanent basis. This|= would have been based on the Mine |Z
state, plus the smaller number of|E other C. I. O. unionists, and plus|=
the C. I. O. started cut to organize |=
As political machines go, it was |Z The|s
But the Mine Workers did not vote (== for Mr. Neely in sufficient quanti- | 2
Mr. Lewis also went into several|:
He also indorsed Rep. Thomas A.|= Jenkins (R. O.), who was never re- |= garded as needing any help, and who ;
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One political figure who took a Ee slapping down in West Virginia's|S== election last week was a man who |=
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