Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 4 March 1943 — Page 4
py Makes Port After ray, tropical il over ihe lined
atte, | HAMM BLASTED i mooi oti 5 3} under. The fortresses’ spitting guns, | attle pli: seven .probables, while long- [bombed
Haned from Page One) range P-38 fighters batted down id dropped vg blasted an 8000-ton and a Am cans .G Int two more’ zeros, both falling to pi- Is Pléee Ermer EE ARTE SE of hr ih on transport out of the 14- Dee : lots who never before had downed{o' 2 ? a on which I co bas: such a - ectly rational ew -Ip. m. tomorrow 3 convoy. By Wednesday morn- ericans 9 ef ud a Jap. he Lieut. Richard Smith of ‘Evans- | minutes later I took his pulse again, La a SELEE Sieg EY YB Nas ne Mor 1533 5 State had entered Huon gulf and| Reich-Than Ever Before; | tne three. big ships in the first ville,’ who few a P-38 Lightning|and this time it wos so fast that Teme a fined ty dint one shiv All} © |v 8 formation which bombed four Fee, ok ceul 0¢ down pag Carat ee allied fighters steadily whit RAF Hits Hamburg. | (probably six, possibly nine) of the attle. fot Srdovmmpa En. awa Happened s while the bombers flew in { (Continued from Page One) ed by Capt. Staley; Maj. Ed: Scott e Save my = Abu from less scious in a Tew Iointes and asked y struck at Rotterdam, their first|f Hollandale, Miss. and an officer | shan 100 yards and it went, straight |her: “What's happened?” She said |] identified as Denault. : Fi that -when she told him. had raid being made against the city to sea . Er on Aug. 27, 1942, Maj. Scott; in describing the at- Sorgt, Dire enlisted in July, 1039, {been an accide lent he grabbed the Havoc light bombers came} * re : tack after finding the convoy, said: |for ground (rew service, but since. doar ‘handle and said: “I've got to + the ships at mast-height to] ~OP¢ formation of fortresses flew. «we made a 108-degree turn and has become an aerial engineer. He (See.” \ a 6000-ton and two other|through bad weather to Hamm,|then. started our run with Staley|saw service in the Panama Canal] The character: witnesses included m cargo ships. scored direct hits-on targets in the and Denals en iy wings. Then|zone then in Hawaii and Australia. gn 2s Banetol st. ie the day was over, they had marshaling yards, ; e zeros hit us. There were eight.” | -Last fall a fortress cn which he|a DOW ng companion’ o e- scossrmm “12 direct hits op six ships. 14 German plan et: Each fortress loosed a 1000- |was on duty bombed a Jap cruiser. |fendant; ‘Roy Galbreath, 32. Spen- oa of ms A ie ‘Japanese planes refused to s pounder. Crossing a big transport| He is 26 and the son of George|er ave. & neighbor; Mrs. Alice] fous s Z¢ an ERE il I 1 them. _ | journey. obliquely, Staley on the left wing, |E. Dirr Sr. 1445 N. Wallace ave. Songer, manager ‘of the grocery i nwhile, B-25 Mitchell me- The other also found dirty weath- put the three first bombs in the E _graduated from Tech high where the ‘Lees traded, and Frank were at work, accounting for |°T in the flight to Rotterdam, but|water, the fourth on the deck at|school and worked for. Kroger's be- | Antrobus, garage and filing station |} Ships, A destroyer rolled over plunged through it to, drive home the how. Scott putt the three first|fore enlisting. i Whisk, Lee de io "A 5000-ton transport|the attack with bomb’ hits in ‘the |of a string’ across amidships near| He is a brother of Mrs. Ralph er tilled | ay never bo minutes after being di-|¥ArECt ares ; the funnel and the fourth in the|Williams, Miss Jane Dirr and Wil- Sw : izure of rr = hit. Other medium ocargo| London had two air slarins last|water. Denault put the first on the|lam Dirr. all of Indianapolis. esse any
4 night as the German air force at-|- : : - rr vo Wife Is ‘Recalled and two other destroyers Were| cq to retaliate for the heavy
burning and smoking. un that th A F. Der na aE Hi 1 P Ga | ‘The defendant's wife, Mrs. Elma EE én the B-25s turned back to POURMISE ones He has emocrat ints on (ot | Lee, was recalled to the stand today!] ir base four columns of smoke “lS one four-ton block- and testified as to their home life. ered over the oil-slicked waters, She said that he was a devoted husMb seert Tor 40 miles, | UuSter. demolition pombe heaped r usit 0 ar ar e 2 Seep Yor new destruction on Hamburg, ‘one y band and father. Three Waves of Fortresses [of Germany's most hombed cities, in Howard Hunter, police laboratory
38 Lightnings were engaging What was described officially as a (Continued from Page One) : technician who took a drunk-o-
en 20 and 25 Japanese fight-| heavy attack. ‘Torrents of incen-| chairman Walker said about that ager. wf the MeNatt-for-president Sele 155% un See Tat it snowed no
mized types while this work|diary bombs also were rained on|white House conference. We went campaign in 1040. trace of alcohol. Re — : and shot down 10, as, well {the city. there prepared, under the resolution| He told Senator Frederick Van-|" poo 0 SC Gr oo oon ar fH SAE pi Eighth Night of Raiding |adopted at the recent Chicago com-|Nuys (D. Ind) afterwards that helq, “afternoon after Began Joa EAN ERE 2) came waves of flying for-| ... .. woo another blow in the ‘mittee meeting, to register and re- [thought some good would come|g.. vel: BE Garrison denied a I A NHR : : * The first scored a hit and allied offensive to smash cities con- port on the complaints throughout!from the visit. He also said ‘that|e oo motion for a directed verdict oid 0 A 0p, Ass P+" Beautifully engraved, miss on a cargo ship and de- : the country with which Democrats, the . . complaints throughout . the Te [ iN pi Ne % diamond bridal set, 1 trid=ting to Genyanys Submarine of not guilty. a 23 ‘seven out of 15 or 18 Jap- Varfare, are. confronted. country are directed at the bureau- Mrs. Elma: Leé told the. jury: that ~All ar =f iy. ‘karat gold mountings. ‘fighters. The second scored) More sub matines are built along “president Roosevelt, who I un- crats, but the damage is. done to the when she first saw her husband c | : “ ; it. and ~miss on & 4000-t0niy0 nine miles of wharves at Ham-|derstand has been slightly ill, ap- Democrats. after the accident, he told her hel] = “7 : : $2 50 ater which exploded and sank! pn” oe TEE © or German | eared to me like a big boy Who had| MF. McFlale said he heard some | youl “never drive again as long as = rr, Both ir bagged one Japanese fighter port. Among the . principal ship- been called. out of a nice warm bed mention of” “fourth term” and sip- I live: ”» 4 y sD AAA Rings t of a force of eight or 10. TWO| vo. dc are those of the Blohm &|to see some none-too-welcome visit-| Ported “the Walker view that the Learns of Accident Z I nas A ‘WEEK enemy pianes were damaged. Voss Co. ors. president only smiled and dismissed : AIR: i” : third hit a medium cargo ship It was the 96th raid of the war| “He begen the Gonversation ‘at |this political angle. Most hopeful She stated that she had never | 5 | 7 a og EL a. shot down five out of 15 JaP-|on Hamburg, the last previous at-|OnCe and did all the: talking. It|thing, Mr. McHale reporiet, was a known her husband™to have any . . ZEZEEesreA QW Realtones, e interceptors. tack having been made on Feb, 3. |Was mostly about the war dnd all | memorandum which will be pre- 105%) on: seize ® hyo o a ; 4 reports covered only the| Last night was the eighth straight|0Ver in 10-minutes fiat’. I heard pared and-presented setting forth |1942 - en: he ‘co apsed a grothrough Wednesday until| night on which Britain's huge four-| nobody mention, the fourth term, the various grievances of the party’s |Cery store. i Rn and the story of the rest|engined bombers have blasted tar-|NOr any of the subjects. which we |national committeemen. Describing the family’s activities Large sener dia- PA the attacks has yet to be gom-|gets in Germany, thus. doubling the came prepared to: talk about.” “I never even heard of the memo,” during the week-end preceding the} Road e . need 4 previous record of four consecutive| A less gloomy view of the’ con- Mr. Hurley declared. “When I got accident, Mrs. Lee said that oni} 4 hy Jamon 100 Bombs Dropped : night raids on the Reich set in May, | ference was reported by Frank M. back to the Mayflower hotel, I told | Saturday night a few drinks were | ara gold motzatne of. the gieates factors con-|1942, and equalled the following McHale, Democratic national com-{a friend that it would have been |served among friends at their home ting to our success was the September. mitteeman from Indiana and man-{better if we all had stayed in bed.” {at 28 Spencer ave,
; 2 “C4 that ‘the Japanese convoy was - German Raid Is Light Nn ae BE i y 2 she s 492 4
and its 4 intentions 2 - = en ee Me BERT THURMAN, GOP LENDER, DEAD [325 i the army. spokes ) there had béen a “terrible accident
4 _|time two. hours before dawn—Gerou air ors ag 2 oe a man planes flying singly, swept over (Continued from Page One) ; downtown,” ba k during recent lulls London in the face of a terrific anti- z “I went home and someone from ast the conyoy |PICrait barrage, presumably to make dent Taft, serving four years. When his candidacy for mayor, here Inlthe City hospital called,” she conit ‘over 100 Ronghe nd 3 prov y a show at retaliation for the smash-| his term expired he helped organize |1938, but withdrew on the “advice of tinued. “They said Mr. Lee had ! ; fe X u) 5 oo nds rounds of SAmItIOn, The |! ing"R. A. F. raid on Berlin Monday the American Bank & Trust Co. at|his physician. been brought in ‘and had had an 3 3 ed Eo, : = iy). : Ean 2 ar : i ther” which mad Tuesday's night. * New: Albany. . He was associated with the firm accident. They told me he was in|} ~~ "~~ '\~ ~~ = © hla : a : Grr 4 w oe Hehtl A joint air ministry-home security| He was appointed internal revenue | of Kahl & Thurman, accountantsthe custody of the police, and I im- : oe erations. so Siffleul was s : Y| ministry communique said only 30| collector for Indiana by President and attorneys, but had been retired mediately went: thes station. d on Wednesday, Our planes|y, 40 German planes crossed the| Harding in 1921 ‘and was yeap-|for fore than a year. “ savefo still ‘attacking and exterminat- | gritich coast in the first raid and|Pointed four years later by Presi=| Mr. Thurman was & member of the, remnants.” fewer than that penetrated the dent Coolidge. the Fifty-Pirst Street - Methodist, “When 1 fist saw tim, his face Gen. “MacArthur's: own comment |tondon barrage. na 8 Bller That year Mr. Thurman. was church, Knights: Templar ‘and ‘the was clammy end wet and he was
ooze on ROTTERDAM AND Em cs = within;
I PPILI PIII ZAG, AA i
IIA APES
sl. 28 A WEEK,
/ o| named Republican national commit- | Columbia: club: for 23 years. =. — shaking and sobbing. ( He put his] “Merciful providence guided Us| second “attackiit touetiet” req | teeman upah the death of Joseph B.| Survivors sre his ‘wife, Mabel 3" around me and said, ‘Honey, ‘this victory.” raiders were shot dow "| Kealing. When Mr. Watson's name | Whalen Thurman, to whom he was I'll never drive again &s long as 1 : As was expected, The Berlin radio| was. entered in the ‘Republican married in 1894; a daughter, Mrs. Pye; d Jap Bases to triumphantly reported that German | Presidential primary that year, Mr.| George L. Foote of Indianapolis, and| “He was always a Very careful planes, “attacking in waves, caused | Thurman became his oc#mpaign| one grandchild, Martha Foote. driver and had never had ‘an aceiConvoy Battle | tremendous: destruction in’ London,| manager. Services will be at 3 p.m. Sat-|dent or been in trouble with the ASHINGTON, March 4 (U.P).|dropping thousands of incendiaries| Fe resigned as national commit- |urday at. the Flanner & Buchanan police.” American bombers, apparently|and numerous * high ni teeman in 1932 to become a Sandl|y morazy. Burial wills “be in Glen On cross-examination; Mss.’ Lee ng up Gen. Douglas Mac-|bombs of heavy and heaviest cali- date for governor. He announced explained that the car involved in ur's attacks on the Japanese|bers” The broadcast obviously ; avoy, struck at five enemy bases! was designed to bolster the morale _ the Solomons on ‘Wednesday |of the German people, reeling unnd time) ‘without the ‘loss of|der the impact of the allied raids. : " op BR : Pali conn i A ‘of our aircraft, the navy an- In contrast to the feebleness y/o : WN i COA gama | RE A unced today. of the German raids ‘was a report sy RE Saal LE in berator heavy bombers aftacked|from the British ' Broadcasting es on the southeast coast of|Corp. that fires still were bupning inville, Buin and Ballale in|in Berlin from Monday nigh same general area, and Vila on|A. F. assault. Swiss reports in- ” Dg Pighter-escorted|dicated that the city still was S / YY % 4 3 : a de s dive bombers made the|without gas, electricity or water: ; i Pa BR re, : SN | A /) Fine brilliant dia-- “Gg pes fa 4
American sir attack on Munda,|/ pi , ER a | : > xionds. Tey ers
Georgia island, and started a NEW MERIT BOARD Fase A APEENR A 7 {lB Styled for your — of the places attacked are " woo NUMEESNNN i Ni £& a Sy re. Ne nama air bases, and the bombings SCOTTISH RITE EEA NY BN WE Cy) [i ly were designed to prevent AMED BY GOVERNOR One piece mounting with 6 2 we he ¥ i : Tul A. mmeririvmmn “in support of the big 18.0 GN, MERA eo! i . % So 2 ¥ wy / RN SA "= dS . ; webs / yy rin” Srna oT sso convoy while fliers-of Gen.| - (Continned from Page. One) i An east nD 3 BT hl KN. Me Joa | Wa atin a hur's command were blast- ployéd in the state instituti of white gold double eagle. NR » SENS for ot ; ; 2 ) ili o Z us : w Exiuyis ay a bridal ‘set. 4 8 enemy fleet. ons. RR Sah hae x . ; ly Rai a. \ "ADMIRAL" : » ? A a I / : AIA ns > / 7 a” . ; : 4-diamor iii are operated under the merit $7 §00 3 \ Q : : i iE % Fo Richly AL aved "14system, In addition to her club 0 Ro Xx : : : or AR a Dr sermon karat mountings, activityy Mrs. Ahlgren is chairman $125 A WEEK pr NY : ; Sparkling diamond, 14- HE Th ro % : kerat yellow gold TEN " agit, pw of the women’s section of the In- 5 / = I a asa i a wn 2 $7 390 diana War Savings staff division. NS ; i = : i oS : Ny ) pCi : Bo \
number of plan mm
Mr. Gardner served as a member
of the house of representatives in NT SS ” 49 | : i RLY | y % | 7 io tay \ 3 Look Swell 1933 and was an aid to Paul V. RT Eh a $ 50. a xy | pn, na a wees.
McNutt when he was governor- # a : $1.25 A WEEK 1 t : : : That Usly Fat general of the Philippines in 1938, A ey : Ss Go , adult at. So Former School Head" ‘nN hi /4 0904 3 NN _— rr Ww Ff without starvation | app Campbell formerly was super- % : : foe exercises Bresle intendent of schools at: Anderson|}. ARR Shae ; "GENERAL" xoess fat is due | for many years and was a member 5 ¥ : ; - of the state board of education. WE. 2 : ; } Large, lustrous diamon The appropriation for the state SW 1/8 a set hg a massive Wk personnel board, which was slashed Ch ; J \ : a yellow sold mounting. ot in the house from $171,000 to $54,000 wr A NW HL SN ab ora RAE wes for the next two years, is to be re- : A j : i PO NERY 7 = $ [ Sr stored’ in the senate to $140,000 ag- a IA ON" y RES NN cording to senate leaders. wan an {pe es A : 175 whx. any me} bout advise Members of the personnel. board; : : 3 5 ry mr FY ! : : “9 Dy of her in. |Who were legislated out of office, _ Beautiful diamond formation as » were William ©. Birthright, inter- set in yellow gold Jrove) i national president of the Barbers'|}. ‘mounting. Blue big ? ngredien consult » union; Earl Beck, personnel director enamel insignia. Ql nds i personnel director of L. 5. Ayres & $ 50 : Saki oe TT Ca ial 5s (Cos and Edward Foust, edt tor off} 37 rs i. a
= nas A WEEK od "MAJOR" Fv BY Brilliant diamond, ate We M wo N EY a yu “ron ivEsTMENT | tractive mounting = of
vi Buy: WAR BONDS First 8 500 Diamonds from ROGERS seoond na a weEK
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