Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 9 October 1943 — Page 2

Yanks Make Record Flight, and planes. The Sar . I plane, ia Serve Notice on Nazi | rast December the ship was Leaders. moved to the South Pacific. She (Continued from Page One) the night operations were carried gut by the siongest Spree, stub ou

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not based on any right or wrong in the controversy, but rather upon the fact that the city has $5,000,000

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SECRET ENEMY films showin; how gliders were used in capture ‘of Crete have been shown by arny to house members of the war and pavy appropriations subcommittees, since navy and marine corps decided to abandon glider programs. It's still an n question, congressmen say, whether gliders have proved their wo.

ANCIENT BATTLE, of butter vs. margarine will resume Oct. 26 committee. It centers on Fulmer bill to producers and distributors of between dairy and cottonseed

“INo. 1 and No. 2 tomatoes ought to

situation involving notoriously underpaid workers” referred to unskilled Jabor used in unloading freight cars at lighterage points. They get 68 eenits an hour, compared with $1 for longshoremen, 99 cents in shipyards. Railroads tried to get them a rdise but ran into anti-inflation controls,

. . . =r # » . STABILIZER VINSON is faking a look at commissions; may Issue an order limiting commission compensation in 1943 to levels earned in 2942 and 1941, even if an individual boosted his sales volume this year. . ss @ se ow SOUTHERN AND WESTERN have formed a joint * eommittee to force equalization of freight rates (Senator Stewart-Rep. Boren, chairmen). But & backfire is being built up in northern and eastern states, where a “write-your-congressman” campaign has, been launched. New committee will choose one of 13 pending bills to support; north and east bloc will oppose whichever they choose.

Allied Patrols Ford Yolturno;

. Transport Center Captured edw Iie’ sims via:

(Continued from Page One)

miles in strategic sec- took place somewhere along the 17- (hogs produced be finished to aver-| line, mile stretch of the river between age weight and maturity since unand the west coast. Other|finished hogs or over-weight hogs army forces mopped up scattered south of the Volturno and in a line-straightening

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buying + |than at present,

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ships, mostly destroyers—fled. And I mean fled”.

‘Evacuation’ Fails plant's water supply. Mr. Jacks sald automatic safety devices might have turned off the switch after the pow-

was indicated that the enemy fleet|r Went down.

was en route to Kolombangara in Police Are Withdrawn an attempt to evacuate the rem- Had) secretary nants of the Japanese troops from|. ey ee that island. Halsey's spokesman Port, that at last night's peace suggested, however, that the move ,,.., sanitation workers had been was aimed at Vella Lavella, where .,..., «g clean slate” by works board 300 to 700 Japanese soldiers are m.i,;; and engineers who had ad.

- |slowly being wiped out by American |, ioq that “pumps had automat-

troops. jcally kicked after power The American destroyer force had been ol va to go She was commanded by Capt. Frank! wo.rs Board President Harmon Robinson Walker, 44, of Alabama, spearheaded the cityCampbell, who the city: a veteran destroyer skipper. employee compromise, said all police Two destroyer groups had been q.iqiis hag been withdrawn from

dispatched to meet the Japanese EN oy Wuker's small’ unit) lS. lint premises ‘as 8 p.. m.

had reached the scene when the enemy appeared. Without waiting for support, Walker sent his destroyers racing into action, engaging all nine Japanese warships with gunfire and torpedoes.

INDIANA FOOD PREVIEW GIVEN

Farm Experts Meeting Here Offer Suggestions to

Increase Output. (Continued from Page One)

efficient hog growers who could af- . ford to pay more for feed. The Washington WFA, seeking greater sugar beet production, suggested that Indiana boost its acreage from 4000 acres this year to 9000 acres next year but the Indiana] report. replied that if this is to be ( ed the government should support prices, through its program, at higher levels

Reveal Wedding As Soldier Dies

JUST AS.the parents of the

Central ave., were announcing her marriage to ‘8. Sgt. William P. “Wood, he was killed In an auto accident near Camp McKail, N. C. The parents, Mr. and Mrs. L. D. Heavenridge of Spencer, waited until Thursday to announce the wedding which took place in the First Presbyterian church here Sept. 22. Sgt. Wood was killed that night and his bride was notiY. : : She left today for the home of his parents in Framingham, Mass. to where the body is being sent.

-Higher prices were recommended for sweet corn and for tomatoes. The report said the price of U. 8.

be raised so that the weighted average price of tomatoes sold on the graded basis will exceed the flat rate price per ton enough to cover the cost of producing tomatoes on a graded basis. : Apprehension over the feed shortage dominated the livestock aspect of the report. Suggest Hog Cut The. greatest suggested reduction was madé in hogs. Only. 600,000 sows for the spring farrow were recommended, which is 87 per cent of this past spring's farrowing. And for next fall's farrowing the total was suggested at only 530,000 or 86 per cent of the number this| fall. “It is recommended that the number of sows farrowed per farm be limited to the number required to produce pigs to consume the

out unusual assistance from outside agencies,” the report urged. “It is also recommended that the

worth of property that must be

former Harriett Heavenridge, 1702 |

tress daylight assault that helped draw off German fighter strength fromi the main attack on Hannover, The American precision bombers set the pattern for the British night attacks with a twin daylight bombing of Bremen and the nearby towns of Vegesack. x Swarms of Nazi fighters rose to challenge them and the Fortress gunners knocked 142 of them out of the air. That smashing victory cleared the way for the R.A.F. night blow at Bremen, forcing the badly strained luftwaffe to throw weary pilots and planes back into action with little more than a few hours’ respite, The night raid was the R.A. F's 105th attack of the war on Bremen, its first since last Feb. 21, and the American attack was the third by the 8th air force, but the big inland port never before had been the tare get of a 24-hour “Hamburg-type” assault. ]

DISLIKES NAME-—-TOKIO PORTLAND, Me, Oct. 9 (U. P). —Andrew Tokio, 21, wants to change his name to Andrew Taber. Tokio, a native of Bangor, has petitioned probate court for permission to make the: change; explaining - that

his original family name‘was Toki.

When you've. started a telephone call on its way, give the person you're calling plenty of time to answer the ring. Often, people are out-of-doors, : or busy in some distant part of the you ci + house, and it may" take ‘them a ~ won't

nal, in another of the confident pronouncements regarding Red army prowess, sald: - “The initiative now is entirely with the Red army, and the Red army is moving: decisively and: relentlessly toward its final objective —~complete victory over the German Fascist enslavers.

‘Struggle Difficult’

“All these victories, however, will not turn the head of the Red army

utilized, the manner in which the Soviet divisions now are operating after the pause, demonstrates the superiority of our organization, tactics and strategy over the Germans.” Front dispatches sald the Soviets were hagamering the Germans back in three key sectors north and south of Kiev, despite mounting counter-attacks. Nearly 3000 Ger-

...THAT'S THE WAY TO GET THE MESSAGE THROUGH Jie time to get fo the telephone. * When you hear you telephone

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miles south of Zao northeast of Orsha. Sixty localities fell to’ I. Yeremenko's armies through Nevel, 54 miles north of Vitebsk, -toward the Baltic states. The Latvian border is only 60 miles west of Nevel. The Russians were driving toward

ting, take a tip from the hare in our illustration and get there as quickly as

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slans killed 2000 German officers|« The Maj. Harold C. Megrew auxe .|and men and knocked out 24 tanks jliary 3, United Spanish War Vets and eight self-propelled: guns in re- erans, will meet at 8 p. m. Monday pulsing a counter-attack. Thirty- at 512. N. Illinois st... Mrs. Agnes two German planes were shot down.| Wiley, president, will preside.