Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 17 September 1943 — Page 11
” es the threat i people. Even should they be reto fight the Germans, he their losses would be
maller, The Bulgarian regency council, the article said, was set up by the Germans after King Boris’ death, even suggesting that Berlin may
have had something to do with}
rill Esd ih
18 BE FF
Bu »
NAZIS BEHAVING,
FINNS REPORT]
Some Clashes Over Girls ~ Happen; Troops Do Not Fraternize, By JACK FLEISCHER
United Press Staff Correspondent STOCKHOLM, Sept. 17.—At least
the sudden demise of this appsr<|one German soldier of the lot con-
&
it
i |
ot the great
: i
spoke of the’ warned -
!
8
talogued © Bulgaria's
\
ir R gh all
Bulgarian fleet tions to the Sov-
ulgarian army and support a. policy... of the present gov-co-operation with
fiiyast ap
if
!
Lid
Reynolds Raps Draft Debate
CHICAGO, Sept. 17 (U. P).— Senator Robert R. ‘Reynolds (D. N. C), chairman of the senate military affairs committee said today that the controversy over drafling fathers is a definite reflection of loose manpower programs and policies. . “It is high time for war and’ agencies to ‘get together ob the maximum use of men and _ women for both the armed forces ‘ahd production ‘on. the home front,” Reynolds said in a messige to H. 8. Sedgewick, president of the Chicago Junior Association of Commerce. The mangower situation should be considered ss an over-all prob Jem, he said, with the needs of the armed forces and the needs of the home front tied together.
DIES AT SING SING
healthy ruler. This council|signed to ‘the “ghost war” on the is not solving Bulgaria's pinnish front—he may or may not : have been an exception—envied his “Soviet people, |Italian colleagues in axis" arms all patience has|When they surrendered, -
“They may have lost the war;
I th but now they can think seriously Ries, reluding she We of the future,” he told a friend of sea harbors, and|mine when I was in Helsinki a
few: days ago. “We cannot think of the future at all.” That seemed typical of the impression I received of the German officers and soldiers who pass through Helsinki,
Nazis Behave Well
Another clue to the German frame of mind was provided by the
accordion player. in an: apartment}
across the street from my hotel room: - He was one of & group of
erally with English tunes. No Nazi fanaticism there, apparently. My - observation was that the Germans were behaving “correctly” in Finland, and the Finns with whom I talked sald they were. However, German and Finnish military men mixed little. They were seen together hardly ever. The only fraternizing with the Germans appeared to be that of Finnish girls. The Finns told me there was quite a “brotherhood of arms” when the war began, but it had worn threadbare,
Eyed by Germans When I alighted at the Helsinki
"FOR WIFE'S DEATH!
OSSINING, N. Y., Sept. 17 (U. P).
Anibal Almodovar, 21, convicted of | ¥
strangling his wife, Louise, in New
York last November, was executed”
in the electric chair at Sing Sing prison last night. Accompanied by a Roman Catholic priest, Almodovar entered the execution chamber silently at 11:02 two minutes later, youth, a native of Puerto was brought from New York last March In a strait-jacket, but was Sales 2 well-behaved,
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