Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 19 October 1943 — Page 3

“an almost incredible peak. “Meanwhile, its naval losses at Pearl Harbor have been more than

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14 Jamon A. Wiaehart . .. award ~~ of alr medal in Europe. . » .

wins

TRO I os

|Sgt. Donald Smith, 7 Others

Killed as Fortress Crashes

(Continued from Page One)

Lukas-Harold Corp. prior to en- |Flight Officer Melvin Sheets, son of tering the army. Arthur Sheets, Ft. Wayne; 8. Sgt. Funeral services will be at 10 |Harry Swartwood. brother of Frank a. m. Thursday at the Harry W. |Swartwood, East Columbus, and Pvt. Moore Peace chapel with burial [Robert B. Thrasher, son of Mrs. at Washington Park. Pearl Thrasher, Anderson ‘The body is to arrive here this | 8S. Sgt. Thomas R. Brady, son of

| food to the Soviet Union.

Bi

On Yollirin Stamped Out (Continued from Page One) ing American units beyond the upper Volturno definitely dropped off. American divisions struck north-

westward in the region of the Vol turno’s upper reaches. Beyond

Hull Arrives for *' Moscow Parley. By LYLE OC. WILSON United Press Staff Correspondent

| WASHINGTON, Oct. 19.—Switt.|Amorosi and Caiazio they captured {ly following Secretary of State Cor{dell Hull's arrival in Moscow for the {foreign ministers’ conference, the|tions, together wi | state department today announced communities.

natire, < United States, Canada and Great Britain will supply arma-

Faichhio, Avignano, Gioia, Liber and Pontelatone, the main strong points anchoring German posiseveral lesser

Bressa, five and a half miles west of Capua, fell to collapse the last German hold on the north bank of ; the Volturno. The victory was the ments, equipment, materials and main one of the day for the British on the left flank of the 5th army. Besides clearing the bank of the Volturno, the British of the 5th army advanced slightly along the .jcoast. They had been dug in there Jlon the line of a canal some three miles north of the mouth of the

of & Dew agreement

The fact to remember in connection with the conference, however is that it is intended only as a preliminary to a urchill Stalin meeting. No Final Decisions That means foreign min- | Volturno. isters a ig Gat. the fo en) de-| The weather still was impeding cisions on their own at Moscow. If (the 5th army advance, making difthey were competent to make final|ficult the bringing up of supplies decisions in the vast field of Anglo-|and weapons. The allied vanguard Russian-American relations, there|NOW was moving ‘into more rugged would be no need for President country, where a well placed GerRoosevelt, Prime Minister Churchill man 88-millimeter shell could dePremie talin meet |12y the movement over the few ang ® Sowel 5 o available roads. The foreign ministers conference! Nazis Neutralized will be judged in large part on

ALLIED

“AID JUGOSLAVS

Planes Strike at Heart of Nazi Communications In Varder Valley.

(Continued from Page One)

bombers bombed a railway bridge four miles to the southeast, while fighters machine-gunned and destroyed threé locomotives. It. was the first allied raid on

German positions in Jugoslavia and marked a new northward extension of the Northwest 'African air force's hitting power, (A German radio broadcast said several civilians were killed or wounded in’ the suburbs of the city.

Report Heavy Fighting

A communique broadcast from Jugoslav partisan headquarters reported continued heavy fighting in northwestern Jugoslavia and along the Adriatic coast Partisans and Slovene guerrilla units, the communique sald, have driven the Germans from a numsber of strongly fortified villages. Heavy street fighting was reported in progress in Kostanfevica, about 30 miles southeast of Busak, after the guerrillas had broken Jnto the town under cover of a heavy artilléry barrage.

Police Auto

Of Pharmacy (Continuéd from Page One)

were blowing the car's horn and that the red light on the front of the machine was illuminated. “A man ran directly into the path of the police car,” their statéments sald. “We swerved to the left to avoid striking him, but he was struck with the left front fender.” Mrs. Driskoll, in ‘a state “of collapse and under a physician's care, told relatives that she did not see or hear a car approaching. Dr. James C. Katterjohn, deputy coroner, is in charge of the investigation for his office. After the accident another police car was dispatched to the 3600 block of Kenwood to investigate the report of a prowler there and another in the 3700 block. Mr. Driskoll was born in Campbellsburg, Ind, and worked in a drug store there while going to school. On completing high school he attended Purdue university and graduated as a pharmacist. He operated drug stores in Camp-

permit the Germ more defensible. east and release the west. Consequently, the second and the adoption of an in Joint military strategy European war, in lieu of parently independent opera the east and west, consti ) main issue of the conference, in Russian view. Conference Likely If an agreement is reached om those points, relatively little diffe culty is expected in solving political problems and clearing the way for the proposed meeting of President Roosevelt and Prime Ministep Churchill with Premier Josef Stalin, Though relatively little is known of Russia's post-war plans, the Soe viet position is clear on at least two points: Their insistence on 1941 frontiers and their desire not to

bellsburg and Monon, Ind, and | Bartow, Fla, and had been in busi- | ness here since 1929,

the . Scottish Rite and Murat 8hrine here \

Survivors, besides his wife, are!

destroy Germany but only to crush her militarily, The Kremlin is known to regard

integral parts of the Soviet Union, and; in the words of the communist

The Dally Telegraph reported afternoon by military escort and (Mrs. Jennie Brady, Evansville, is p Po Chaplain Walter Laetsch of Stout [missing in the southwest Pacific. field will conduct the services. A s 8 =

detail from Stout field will con- Prisoners

comtery. Ary ceremony at the | pve HOOSIERS today were list-

cemetery. ed among 440 seamen of the Survivors besides his parents hant marine held " “o!

; Mc- : is a Srangathes; James A . by Japan and Germany, : tyre, BelBoyi: "ad bo They are Wilford L. Conner, son grandmother, IS. enrie of Mrs. Carrie Flowers, Lakeville;

two sons, Lowell, Gallup, N. M., and | organ Pravda, will not tolerate dise that the Germans were moving re- |Lovell Jr, who has been In the|oussion of them “any more than the inforcements to the ald of their army a month and is stationed In| United States will discuss the hard-pressed garrisons in the | Mississippl; a brother, Kenneth, | boundaries of California.” Balkans, sending three divisions (Gallup, N. M., and two sisters, Mrs.| So far as Germany 1s concerned, At the mountain town of Ripa-|into Jugosiavia and two to Albania. |Carl Wright, DelRoy Beach, Fla. the Soviets have disclaimed : + Publication of ne Rimes 3 fhoge bottoni a German force which had| The partisans said enemy troops and Mrs. Bert Costain, Omaha. | intention of ravaging the oh accompanying Hull m y would | been cut off behind the allied lines were being cleared from the moun-| The body was taken to the Flan- | though they were expected to insist that the 72-year-old PTET Was neutralized, and the entire rear |tainous lower Styrian sector along ner & Buchanan mortuary pending on compensation for material lossag be ready to discuss political, military =" firmly in allied hands.|the Jugoslav-Austrian frontier. [funeral arrangements. caused by the Nazi armies. and economic questions. : (The term neutralized was not =

owed Infantrymen slogged through the Whether it Rovally ia i “by 2 mud and occasional showers behind

the three nations. Mr. Roosevelt|th® combat engineers and sappers

desire such|¥ho forged ahead to rout out the ang Shrehil urgently . German knots of resistance.

war

“The hopes and prayers of the old world,” he said, “are with its most powerful offspring. For no nation in history has so great and honorable a destiny been marked the course of events. None

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}- Tay, Garrett; 8. Sgt John-Neal;-|-e in| Son of Mrs: Musbet Neal, Madison:

{JOE GORDON, YANKEE

‘Smith of Indianapolis. Wayne A. Dooley, brother of Mrs. a8. 8 Roy E. Walters, Martinsville; Paul Missing Petro, husband of Mrs. Verla Petro, }Gary; William Q. Porter, son of THE WAR DEPARTMENT to- |Mrs. D. A. Porter, Logansport, and day announced the names of 635 |Bruce Sayre, brother of Mrs. Ora army personnel, 2¢ of them from | Wiley, Wabash, Indiana, as missing in action, a8 =» In the Asiatic area the missing are S. Sgt. Robert L. Corbin, Honored brother of Prank Corbin, La- LT. ROBERT E. ARMSTRONG fayette; S. Sgt. James Brown, son JR., serving with the army air of Mrs. Ada Roe, Rushville; Lt. | forces in the South Pacific, has Lee Crabtree, son of Dr. Loule | been awarded the air medal for -Crabtree of Columbus; Lt. Paul | his services as pilot of a pursuit Englert, son of John Englert, ship. ; Monticello; 8. Sgt. Dale P. Huffer, | Son of Mr, and Mrs. Robert E. son of Mrs. Nettie Huffer, War- Armstrong, 835 N. Audubon rd. saw; 8S. Sgt. Norman Kreiten- he is a graduate of Tech high stein, husband of Mrs. Loyla | sonool and a former student of Kreitenstein, Evansville. | Purdue university. T. Sgt. Merl Martin, son of He received his commission pavid Martin, Rockville; Lt. Wil- | ong pilot's wings at Luke field,

liam Meyer, son of Mrs. Edna - Steiner, Ft. Wayne; Lt. Keith Ara; Jam. 4 2a = en father ha Mur- in i Murray, son of Mrs. Orp was_an_officer in the. army in. . = ® LT. JAMES A. WISEHART, pilot of an 8th air force Flying Fortress, has received the air medal for * , coolness and skill” displayed while participating in five combat missions over continental Europe. He is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Roy P. Wisehart, 834 Park ave. and had worked at the Link-Belt Co. before entering the army Jan. 20, 1942, ! He attended Central Normal eollege and received his flying training in Georgia, Florida and Idaho. He was commissioned a second lieutenant Dec. 12, 1942. At the same time he received the air medal he was promoted to first lieutenant.

Lt. Myron Newell, son of William Newell, Cutler; 8. Sgt. Herschell Richardson, son of Mrs. Bertha Swartz, Bicknell; 8. Sgt. Joseph Thomas, husband of Mrs. Joseph Thomas, Charlestown; Flight Officer Jack Trowbridge, son of Harry Trowbridge, Vallonia,. and 8. Sgt. Frank Winninger, son of Mrs. Jennie M. Wininger, Martinsville, Missing in the North African area are Pie, Paul Brookbane, son of Mrs. Minnie Holliday, Lafayette; Lt. Louis Curdes, husband of Mrs. Norma Curdes, Ft. Wayne; Lt. Dan F. Grover, son of Mrs, Mary Grover, Bloomingdale; 8. Sgt. Clarence LaBoyteaux, son of Dan LaBoyteaux, New Castle; Sgt. Joseph Miazga, son of Frank Miazga, Gary;

Nazis Retreat North of Kiev

vw »

(Continued from Page One)

front since the battle of Belgorod at the outset of the Red army's campaign. The German planes carried out several thousand sorties daily.

STAR, TO QUIT GAME

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Claypool hotel, 13.30 p. m. Indianapolis Band luncheon, Hotel Washington, 12:

Alumni, 15 p. m.

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Travels With Hull

Averell Harriman, former lendlease expediter in London and now the new ambassador to Mosow, traveled with Hull. Others in the party were Maj. Gen. John R. Deane, secretary to the combined U. S.-British chiefs of staff here; and from the state department; legal adviser Green H. Mackworth; political adviser James C. Dunn; information chief Michael J. McDermott; Charles E. Bohlen, assist ant chief of the European division and former consul at Moscow; C, W. Gray, Hull's secretary; George V. Allen, assistant chief .of the near eastern division; William A. Fowler, assistant chief of the division of commercial policy and agreements; Philip E. Mosely, language expert; Cavendish W. Cannon, expert on Yugoslavia, Rumania, Czechoslovadia and Bulgaria; Henry P.

amplified.) Across the Apennines, the British 8th army pushed its flanking drive

Montecilfone, in a three-mile advance from Guglionesi, and San Stefano, after heavy fighting.

ATKINS HONORS

Carl Noffke’s Hobby Is

Painting, but War

Comes First. (Continued from Page One)

ie | study vehicle on the assembly | Tehran, fran.[line. He conceived the plan of re- © The Moscow press opened up some | placing several of the parts with days ago with a barrage of articles|one, submitted it to the army ordinsisting that military matters and, mance department, and the new especially, the urgency of opening| production method has now been a land front in w Europe|in use abut 60 days. It will scon be should take precedence over other|adopted by other war industries conference subjects. Hull obviously|putting out the same instrument of is Mr. Roosevelt's foreign relations|war, spokesman rather than his military 20 Years Experience With from 90 to 100 employees

man. But that fact need not mean that Hull would refuse 10 dI6CUss|, der him in the Atkins tool room, Mr. Neoffke is one of the company's

the so-called second font. strongest backers of the suggestion

TRAFFIC ACCIDENTS system. He's ‘made hundreds of CAUSE SURVEY HERE suggestions for conservation of ma-

terial and time and freely offers his _| advice to subordinates who come to Charles Mosier, Chamber of Com him sens. .| Since coming to the saw man-

hs the machine shop, later did per-city-wide survey is|sonnel work, process and sales engischeduled to start Nov. 1,

here. He said the

water color nainting and sketching.

ROUTS HOTEL GUESTS Hes made inlaid card table tops,

placques, and paintings for his

forum

LSTA

TISTICS

Stidham, 18, st Long polylomye-

RET, 3 Met ape,

Nt Sian th Clovis B. Watson, 51, st Veterans’, peptic

H 51, at Bt. Vincent's, ER

OFFICIAL WEATHER

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—Oet. 1942 pes isn : 24 hrs. end 7:30 8 m. 5 5 Fa wo be Fate Jan. 1 cov 20.

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TOOL ENGINEER

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rials and labor, Mr, Noffke started| . |

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