Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 15 October 1943 — Page 8
key positions the Germans will be to avoid entrapment,
Nazis’ Ouster
From Crimea
ment on the arderly disposition of ° sommes ope snes au ve [5 Predicted
“We want to see this property re- (Continued from Page One) turned to private ownership or muaud : alre isolate the Crimea by land. Sicipalities 20g W areas are in-| Melitopol itself was aflame as ihe) Russians battled through the streets, | association was to elect as was Gomel at the opposite end with a luncheon con- of the Dnieper river defenses. Be-two-day conference. tween them the Russians were beatuet last night, [ing down flerce German counterpresident and [blows before Kiev and tightening h their grip on the Ukrainian capital, The massive battle of the lower . Dnieper rapidly neared a decision war production... as the Russians hurriedly mopped up at Melitopol, in order to join vsky's men in the push down corridor between the Dnieper minimums and the sea of Asov. : railroad through Melitopol cut, leaving the Germans a 20,000, recarious wartime railroad from Sim lon ina rapidly canvering ihe the Perekop isthmus to Kherson as e to peacetime ir route e pursuits at “productive levels never rill Sap on ‘before attained in our economy.” Soviet armed forces also were | Promises Post-war Jobs ~~ [hammering the eastern Crimea | across the Kerchenski straits and| *1by air were pounding the last rail “iline out of the peninsula, obliging re ren that|the Germans to hasten their aban-|
" donment of the Crimea. Bir Rousing in defense , The Soviet Black sea fleet i
“not turned over to federal housing had the use of the Novorossisk and| authorities after war.” Anapa harbors, giving it anes? | |
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governm of the central Black sea which was own 200 billion. dollars OF rent rtats believed sufficient to frustrate any fncluding over 700,000 homes, he |Cerman attempts at a Crimean pointed out. Dunkirk, “The realtors are working out a| Front reports sald Zaporozhe was offer employment to 5,000,-|a “veritable wilderness” of eee | to provide private housing |age when the Russians moved in. facilities which are neglected now The newspaper Isvestia said that! because of material and labor|in two years of war such “monpriorities,” Mr. Galbreath concluded. [strous devastation” had not been |
{— encountered. | There was no trace of the city’s OPA IS CONSIDERING Pidgin REVISION FOR MEAT stations. or the famous Dnieproges, hydro-electric plant built by the] NEW YORK, Oct. 15 (U. P).— American, Col. Hugh Cooper, which Plans to revise meat ceiling regu-|harnessed the Dnieper waters to lations », ~ ndependen siaughe supply power to thousands of! a, Who Sued 4 hablo. to] UATe miles in the Ukraine. |
y. hundreds i bli Nat Mathanson, chief of the OPA!Rucs amy fo hold | Bima di
protest division in Washington, dis-|a4van, trica closed at a ‘court proceeding here,|peir Se and extricate the ult 61 that Price Administrator Prentiss Admit City's Fall
€co=|stabilization and the depart- (The official German news agenof agriculture for “an equali-|®Y DNB acknowledged the fall of of .|Zaporozhe in a dispatch o
The Germans still refused to ad. {mit defeat in Melitopol, however, and a Soviet communique sald they were pouring a ceaseless flow of reserves into the city. More than 2000 Germans were killed and 26 tanks and 46 guns destroyed in see-saw fighting yesterday. With the severing of the Melito-
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FREE | ECTURE
LJ I GEE Tan UNE Ba © IDIC
HRISTIAN SCIENCE |
SECOND CHURCH OF CHRIST, SCIENTIST
By RICHARD J. DAVIS, C. S. B. BAN JOSE, CALIFORNIA
Of The Board of Lectureship of The Mother Church, I
Church of Christ, Scientist, in Boston, Massachusetts ~ CHURCH EDIFICE
Delaware at Twelfth Street
at regular intervals in an attempt to regain lost positions, but were thrown back. More than 3000 Ger-|
Russian tanks broke through the [east of Wewak. German -lines-in- one sector north
bane nv vivile Marte
Er Nn wy ¢ 1. ack-Uyed vl
New Allied: Air Blows All
Hollander Dyed northern Muskraf
Along Pacific Front “countless lorties, tanks, armed re-
Are Revealed. = connaissance cars and aircraft.”
partisan troops practically had enshot down without loss to the American formation. sirelsd ‘the big ASTiANG Sespess of
It was the second straight attack] Trieste and suggested that the fall
on the alrd M than|Of the city was imminent. 130 fighters and bomt These sources said the partisans
dropped more than 700 bombs on field Sunday and destroyed 12 at.|had intercepted a radioed appeal for
tacking fighters. help from the German commander through
Other medium bombers ge in the city to Rommel enemy shipping in“Matchin , at the northwest tip of Bougainville, Use Dive Bombers bombing two large cargo vessels| The message was sald to have warned Rommel that Trieste may be Jost unless reinforcements were rushed in, i
effects might not become for days or weeks. This victory, coupled with al- imentioned the Trieste fighting, but lied ground drive on New the Germans admitted their troops may force the Japanese to =|were meeting stiff opposition east draw most of their troops alr-lof Piume. power. from Rabaul to Wewak, in northeastern New Guinea, these Report Street Fighting
fighters were reported machine-|{town of Zenica. gunning strong Japanese patrols| At the samé time, they said raid-
joint campaign against the Nazis.
the : the| Were shelling Trieste heavily, and)ynes "Cor yor” Be ed oe plunges oa " toe- FILM MAR N22 2 too cul "ape ge tha far KETS SEE is to use the tires that are made by
Capua. Ger-
to throw the allied advance ing Nazi Germany, are out to cap-
Americans got in Capua, the town became a the (sources said. Such a move would The partisans also reported fierce] ons land. The more leave the enemy's position in the fighting along the main northern Solomons dangerously ex- line east of Ljubljana, in Slovenia, temporarily posed and sald street battles were con-|assault that On the New Guinea front, allied [tinuing in the Bosnian industrial| into the town and on
Things have happened contesting the advance of Austral-jing columns had damaged railroad pattie i. the Volturno that
{lan troops down the Ramu river lines in Croatia and western Bosnia. haven't happened on mans were killed and 35 tanks | valley toward the enemy's coastal] Jugoslav sources in London sug-|field of this war. base at Madang, 185 miles south- gested that Gen. Draja Mikhallo-| Daring patrols made vitch’s patriot armies and the parti-| British and Americans cast Last reports placed the Australiansans -commanded--by Gen. Josip their weapons a few days of Kiev and routed three enemy [column about 35 miles below| (Tito) Brozovich may unite in athe drive and swam Madang. its deepest point in
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~ ‘Watery Hell’ fo Hurl
(Continued from Page One) Jugoslay sources in London said (Continued from Page One)
WAR RACE FOR [=o oor ems or
WASHINGTON, Oct. 18 (U. P)— rd end" ot ‘tha wai an 40 Dozens of foreign countries, includ- | war, he mid, be available from different sources Hollywood has dominated for the world. He felt this supply undoubte 20 years, the commerce de-|edly would make - possible
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TOKYO DENOUNCES ITALY
By UNITED PRESS Tokyo. radio today termed Italy's declaration of war against Gere
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