Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 29 November 1943 — Page 7
Bt ad
me Doubt FOR - Will Run in '44
: * (Continted From Page One) Er become - the nation’s elder states
‘Declares Germans ' Plant! Reports to Slow Allied War Effort.
Governor ‘Says: They Must Comply With New
man. 3 » “Why would aby man want to be | president for the next four years?" they ask. Yet some do, it. seems. Ce us Malte all these arguments, State Law. : ere are those who are just as (Continued From Page One) |.onvinced the president wil run| - (Continued From Page One)
impairing the whole vigor of the|®8ain. They credit him with ® ings even build with brick walls | war situation. on the allied side.” deeply imbedded desire to partici-! | but wooden Sidings The belief that the United States, [Pate in the peace, to help erect a| The law provides forquarterly in- | Great Britain and the Soviet Union [new world out of the ruins as the spections of nursing homes by the were preparing & “last chance” de- |DAtural sequel of the war, to finish county health departments, but Dr, [mand that the German people rebel {the Whole job, and as ready to #0 Rice sald that the state department against their Nasi leaders or suffer down, if need be, a martyr, lke | would make the first inspection and the terrors of a three-front land {Woodrow Wilson, in this cause, {then would follow up with one attack was strengthened by London| If he doesn't run, the Democrats annually. reports that a tremendous blow of (will be thrown in confusion and, He has made arrangements with psychological warfare was about to consequently, there will be many the various women's clubs that fall upon both Berlin and Tokyo, who will be ready to give him all |sponsored the nursing home law in Capitals Boil With Reports the arguments necessary to save the last legislature to give assistance the: party and themselves to the county Health directors, when | Axis and “united natiops capitals|. Then, in the argument, come the wanted, in making inspections. were boiling with reports that an-|voices of the cynteal “students of | “we want to show leniency.” DF. Poy sy outbullding,
nouncement was expected soon of |numan behavior, who throw out the - > a meeting between President Roose- | question: Rice sald. “It's & problem to know rng case is now before thé county how much leniency we have a right grand Jury. Yt
| velt, Prime Minister Churchill and| «How many to exercise and when. We cant emiii—————— SAYS JAPAN TO GET
Premier Stalin. when to quit?” {close up tomorrow these homes that RAIDS ON NAZI PAR
If there is a Roosevelt- Ohurehil] | fcannot comply with all the provi DEPROIT, Nov. 20 (U. P.).~The
: i
1 £1:
Ext
The war department announcement confirmed the report that 8. Sgt. Harold T. Sheets, son of Mrs. Antoinette L. mes, ne Ww 10th st., is missing tn Euro Other Hoosiers on the ity list are 3d Lt. Charles P. Geyer Jr., son of Mrs. Charles F. Geyer, 1%. Wayne, in the European area; 8S. Sgt. Philip- G.. Bedwell, son of Mrs. Eva Bedwell Marion, and ‘Pvt. Fred A. Ott, son of Mrs. Bertha F. Ott, Ligonier, in the Mediterranean area; and Ist. Lt./ Paul A. Kish, son of Mrs. Margaret
ol <5
longings, even the clothing they wore, lined up at the brink of the Yar and machine gunned. Then {the bodies ‘were thrown into the pit. : It took three days to complete the slaughter. Other executions followed and the bodies tossed into the Yar, which was not nearly so deep. now. The successive layer} of bodies were covered with sand.
2
| sanita
if
Pvi. H r L. Humphrey . . . champs ever knew
wounded in Italy. PVT. HOMER L. HUMPHREY, listed as missing on today’s war department report, is recovering from wounds in a hospital in
See Or, Carl % Kialbor, on. D. Examined—Glasses asy Terms or Cash
The Fair Oplicai Dept.
311-325 W shingle
HINT ROOSEVELT
conference with Stalin, there alm | certainly will be an immediate pg sions of the law and put these old folks out in the streets.”
| sequent Roosevelt-Churchill confer- | Stresses Dangers
ut 3 yards for e Midshipmen 0.score.
Ts
uncie, was eles lency of the Ine g association at yesterday. jam C. Dorman, as voted a life
Ludwig, present
t, was named to absence of First
E. E. Watts, ~F. a 5 x = R. Bauer, husband of Mrs many must be dismembered to some . : s 3 to Janusry, 1940. the army. Dr. PND Whim {| Stoked Fires ‘Dofothy V. Bauer, 807 N. Fulton, | Gen. Keaney also reported that (extent. Hin Von Papen Active § second vice 1 § i Ps } Evansville; Pvt. Dwight Benn, nald ulloug The Mpscow conference of foreign | “Many intimate. telegrams” re- . ve “SOME PRISONERS were made As _Lt~pe B.* MeC h, cently "passed ‘between the White! !
duration, & ove Ups. = on,~moveq up to
nt; Ed Cortas,
Gene Kantz,
th; Paul Jones, *
Dr. Peters, Harte Del Mossholder tary,
its bid for the °
ent, Hammond st city. Neil C,
docal bid, but .
put. by two votes. ded last year, is ie.
‘Comets evened atch with the
DISCOVERY ECOL RELIEF
(Advertisement) Vilkys, Ostrovsky and Davidov spent more than a year in the military prison camp near the Yar. Some 25,000 ‘Russians were taken out of the camp and massacred at the execution grounds.
Dug Up Bodies
VILKYS SAID: “Last Aug. 14, 100 priseners, all officers, - were taken to Baby Yar.
Sots medisiisd mutton suet) —which
Kish, 1428 E. 35th ave, Gary, in the Southwest Pacific area. ‘ss . PFC. HAROLD FLEENOR, husband of Mrs. Joann Fleenor, 1229 W. 34th st, who was wounded Nov. 5in Italy, has been operated 3 = on and moved f to an evacuation hospital, where
We were | §
“lowered into the ravine and told |!
to strip to the waist. “We will shoot you, you filthy Russian swiné,” the SS guards taunted us. We were given spades and ordered to dig out the corpses but there were too many and the Germans brought up excavators. I alone dug up about 5000 or 6000 bodies. They were only in the _early stages of decomposition because. the sand. was dry. . - Many were headless and armless. Most “of them were old people, children and babies. . “We dragged the bodies with iron hoops 30 or 40 yards to incinerators. There were four incinerators. They were the height of a two-story house, They were made of the iron fences of the - Jewish cemetery. “The bodies were put on iron grates, one layer of bodies alternating with a layer of kerosenesoaked wood. Each contained almost 4000 bodies.
8 of WIE ARN A
“fo stoke the - fires.” operation; 8S" officers arrived fre-: i quently in tracks. with ‘prisoners - | ‘who"had been asphyxiated. They. | then brought some prisoners who, were unconscious but alive” and they, too, were thrown into the incinerators. “Prisoners who weakened while working on the incinerators were shot on the spot while the Germans kept, cursing even the corpses, calling them swine and
RUPTURED?
i | La
UPN
3:3
= gL.
“On Sept. 28 we knew it was our turn-to go, so we would not be witnesses.” ’ They decided on a dash for «freedom. They overpowered their
During the jxh
College ave, whose husband, 8. Sgt. Richard Ple. Fleenor L. Huse Jr. is with the Italisn field hospital where Pct. Fleenor was taken. Sgt. Huse wrote his wife that he had talked to Pvt: Fleenor’s nurse
“who ‘said that he was recovering.
The wounded man formerly ‘was the Huses' newsboy. . . » Today's war department announcement of soldiers wounded in action in the Mediterranean included the name of Pvt. John H. Stokes, son of Mrs. Effie Stokes, 1217 Norman ave. Other Hoosier casualties in that area are Cpl. Ralph W. Barr, son of Mrs. Waldo Barr, 100 St. James bivd,, Evansville; Pfc. Emmanuel
nepliew of Gladys Benn, Port-’ tard; - Pre: Martin -Bdyke;: son of
“Martin. ‘Boyke, 2145 N. 21st st. “Terre Haute; Pvt. Robert M.
Braden, husband of Mrs. Gladys M. Braden, Decatur; Pvt. Joseph
“A. Butz, son of Mrs. Margaret |. - L. Butz, Attica; Cpl. John Callo~"
way, son of Mrs. Anna Calloway, Windfall; Pvt. John W. Clayton, son of Frank A. Clayton; Koleen; Pfc. Leslie Kirk, son of George Kirk, Laurel; Pfc. John - W, SF Bey, son of John D. O'BryDaleville; Pvt. Theodore W. he son of Herman Petzke, 613 W. Calvert, South Bend; Pvt. Homér J. Rademacher, husband of Mrs. Elise Ann Rademacher, 1010-B Washington ave. Evans-
Italy, according to later information reaching his wife, Mrs, Louis | Humphrey, 3910 E. 26th st. Mrs. Humphrey received a telegram a month ago, saying her |
husband was missing in action, |
but another war department telegram and letters from Pvt. Humphrey revealed that he was wounded in the Italian campaign
| and was hospitalized.
A former manager of a North side restaurant, he enlisted in the army Nov. 20, 1942. He has never seen his 7-month-old- daughter, Sheron Jean, Mrs. Humphrey is
"| employed in a local war plant,
tions during his 300 combat missions as an army air force pilot. " The husband of Mrs. Joan Schneiders, 39042 N. Pennsylvania st.,, Capt. Schneiders, wears the distinguished flying cross with thrée oak leaf clusters and the air medal with three oak leaf clusters. The new decoration was made in lieu of another air medal award. . . . » A former Butler university student, 1st Lt. Paul N. Wentz of Morgantown, has been awarded the air medal for gallantry in | action, Lt. Gen. George OC. Ken-
| |
alone { manifesto,” | German expatriates, including Com-
{Chiang Kai-shek, as well. It is suggested here that Secre- | tary of State Hull and British Foreign Secretary Eden may have |agreed at their recent Moscow con
{bringing about a home-front col[lapse in Germany. ’ "The Russians undertook the job last July in the ‘Moscow a document signed by
munists, then in Russia. The manifesto called upon German peasants, craftsmen and workers—the people—to overthrow Adolf Hitler rand under a “democratic” regime obtain more lenient peace terms from Russia, Hitlerism who “in good time will re-|
nounce him and join the movement| for a free Germany’ "were promised |, “Le don Dally Mall
full pardon.
It is believed ‘that the Moscow gimo Chiang Kai-Shek and a per-.
{ence with “Chinese ime
IS NOW IN CAIRO,
With Churchill for Stalin's Arrival.
(Continued From Page One)
conference was being held at an ~
“unidentified place,” other repefts reaching Stockholm suggested the “big three” were meeting in North| Africa.
Eduard Benes, president of thé
Adherents of| oyach exile government, also was
| participating “at Stalin's express | wish, the German radio said, whiie reported | rumors circulating that Generalis-
manifesto. could be made the basis|gon ‘representing Germany in some
of a new ultimatum to non-Naai Germans to repudiate the leaders who since 1933 have led them to disaster.
Dismemberitig Essential
But it is ell known here that|
| mere elimination of Nazi leaders {and establishment of a democratic
ney, commander of allied air {| German regime would not conform forces in the Southwest Pacific, [po Mr. Roosevelt's post-war pattern
announced today. Lt. Wentz attended Butler. from
R R. 1, Westport, ‘the stilt ying uci
Mot Arthur Due
”
{Continued From Page One)
suffered from a paucity of surface vessels, Kincaid replied: “I wouldn't be surprised.”
For More Ships
as it was cut as recently as four weeks ago. Our policy is that. Ger-
"has received |jinisters already fias committed the
- three’ jo restoration of Austrian sovereignty and “course, “the “occupied hitions “are 1o- be wrested from German domination, ~ But there is strong feeling here that|-
Germany as a whole must be in- | of
capacity not yet clear may turn up Coinciding with the widespread speculation over the Roosevelt-Churchill-Stalin meeting was a new outcropping of German peace feeler reports, including a Nazi mission to the Vatican. The Stockholm newspaper Svenska Dagbladet quoted Swiss sources for rumors that President Roosevelt and Prime Minister Churchill had left their countries to meet Premie: Stalin “probably in North Africa.”
Hquse, the Kremlin and Downing street, The Empire News added, and |’ their: fruits wilt: be seen: before | hiristmas.” The possibility that - the leaders! the united nations will issue ap
sulated from the warrior race of | ultimatum to surrender or face land Prussians who have nurtured and|assaults from three sides, plus the
commanded German arms-—an plotted wars—for generations, If an appeal 1s made to the German people, it is believed that iq
will contain no promises which | Bern and Geneva dispatches said] .
mounting allled air {against Germany, was believed to ‘have inspired the sudden increase of German peace moves;
Kincaid took over the command would prevent such insulation of|# high German personality, re-
Friday from Vice Admiral A. 8. Carpenden. Known as a “big shin man—an expert on larger tt |
such as battleships—Kincaid com-|
Prussia from the rest of th from the rest of the Reich.
'W. GERMANY HIT
|portedly Baron Franz von Papen,
ambassador- to Turkey, flew to Rome
Friday, saw Pope Pius XII, Papal |———==
Secretary of State Luigi Cardinal {Maglicne and returned .to Berlin
|
He sald that if these elderly per[sons were forced to'leave their pres
alliéd bombing of Germany, intense _as it is, will ip time be concentrated
- homes, many of them waetld |" Japan in even greater fury, Brit-
|
| { { |
offensive
second float non-aprbulatory,” THE fire marshals office fs row |
The law
pointed oft
[so to other places equally dangerdoes not apply to ference to try the Russian plan Reported Waiting There. places in wliich less" than three | [persons are housed:
He that
homes babies” are housed on the pm star Lynn Bari, 23, and test “They are certainly pilot Sid Luft, 28, were married yes he said,
ish Air Marshal Sir Willlam Welch said today.
| FILM STAR, PILOT WED HOLLYWOOD, Nov. 20 (U, P.).~=
in many |
terday in a quiet ceremony at the ‘home of producer William Periberg,
ERT
5 1
PEACE CHAPEI
ALR
f—————
Hy Hl
RRRIRR
GAN
TLL BE 6LAD YO GET mY CHRISTMAS
SHOPPING DONE //
guard at night and ran to the | ville; Pvt. Lewis E. Russell son LEYS BE SuRE TO e & Tool Co. at w * hortly after noon Saturday. fields and ravines. All but those | of Mrs. manded naval operations in the| STARY HOME WITH OUR PACKAGES erday, winning : Ethel M. Russell, 626 8. BEFORE 489 PM. THEN well BE
machine quintet “by 18 pins, and dy for the “rube ure, Mrs. Twye ) pace her team, eyer had 547 for
at Ft. Harrison Al women teams A Falls City WACs 2354 to nack leading the
0. outscored a 2232 to 2150, [argaret Skelton winners.” » from Thompson r a men's team , 2894 to 2716, at Top individuals in with 529 for
aul Sparks with ~ Bemis Letter
feated Stewarte g men, 2321 te alleys.
ins Meet
W. 20 (U, Po ‘Negro knockoub
Conn., will try: |
ns, the duration pion,” at Cleve= ht in the feaweek's national
t between Mure
Negro opponent hristmas =
nual C
| E:5The CHICAG
three with whom I talked were _mowed down by machihe guns. Kiev. is not as badly smashed as Stalingrad, “Kharkov, Orel, Smolensk and other cities. But her population has suffered a shattering blow. Before the war Kiev, third city in the Soviet union, had a thriving population of 1,000,000. Her Jewish population, then 200,000, now numbers rt extetly six,
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| Utterback, | J. Walters, son of: Alfred R. Walters, 1323 Btophlet, Ft. ‘Wayne,
| “wounded.
J st, Kokomo; Pvt. William A. Spencer, son of Mrs. Rachel C. Spencer, Depauw; Pvt. Marion B. Smith Jr, son of Marion B. Smith, 122% E. Tutt, South Bend; Pvt. Robert W. Smith, brother of Mrs. Lawrence 8. DeWitt, R. R. 5, Pt. Wayne; Pvt. Robert D. Thompson, son of Mrs. Ida M. Thompson, Crawfordsville; Cpl. Howard C. Utterback, husband of Mrs, Henrietta A. Princeton; Pvt. Marion
In the Southwest Pacific war theater T. Sgt. Fred H. Tayjor Jr., son of Mrs, Grace M. Taylof, 484 Indiana, Hammond, has been
Honored
North Pacific during reconquest of | the -Aleutians.
So far the Southwest Pacific has
used only light naval forces. Kincaid said air successes against Japa-| Zurich newspaper Die Tat sald res-
nese cruiser and destroyer strength undoubtedly had knocked the enemy fleet off balance, but he warned against optimism.
“The enemy can stand
heavy
BY MOSQUITOES
(Continued From Page One)
cue squads, including German troops and Italian war prisoners, were excavating in the twisted and
charred wreckage -of office buildings
and dwellings for thousands of
losses for many months yet, before sons buried alive.
he begins to be really hurt,” he said. “There is no doubt we are heading
for Japan and there is not ‘any ques-|alive and rushed to hospitals and toi main German-controlled
Hundreds, many of them half suffocated and wounded, were rescued
|
‘NAVY TAKES. OVER PLANT WASHINGTON, Nov. 29 (U., P). —The navy, acting under instructions from President Roosevelt, today took over. part of the ‘Remington Rand Plant at Southport, N. Y., because production was behind schedule and of unacceptable quality. DANES DYNAMITE RAILROAD By UNITED PRESS Danish saboteurs dynamited the railway
tion but that we will go through.|first-aid tents erected in the streets |line running through the eastern “There are several routes and you of the devastated capital, Die Tat [section of south Jutland at five
may be assured which ever way we go. will not be easy’
ALLIED HEADQUARTERS,
said. . Thousands Homeless
: Thousands of bombed-out Ber-
points last night, the Swedish radio sald today in a broadcast heard by v 8. governinent monitors.
Southwest Pacific, Nov. 29 (U, P.).—|liners, some half-dressed .or in the
Another 1000 Japanese have been {killed in ground fighting on Bou-
night clothes they. were wearing when the crash of bombs drove
With the award of a bronze |gainville island, it was disclosed to-|them from their beds last week,
oak leaf cluster for.action in the
day, and allied fliers have added ‘a
wére reported wandering the rubble-
Southwest Pacific, Capt. George [light cruiser to the long list of cluttered streets.
A. Schnieders of Indianapolis has received a fotal of ‘nine decora-
enemy war vessels torn up by their bombs.. :
Times to Start Clothing
“First Children Wednesday
(Continued From Page One) -
have the child at-the Clothe-A-Child office, 212 W. Maryland st., at that time. ~ The child's parents will watt at the office while you and the child do your shopping in the stores.
If you want your money to be used to clothe a needy child, mark it “Clothe-A-Child.” If you prefer that your donation buy a
In every corner of Berlin streets,
there are wehrmacht field kitchens
dishing out soup to the homeless. The Stockholm newspaper Afontidningen said millions of Berliners were living in cellars. Hundreds lined up .at fire hydrants for water, the newspaper said, and a considerable food shortage was reported. A Swiss newspaper, Neue Zuercher Zeltung, Switzerland, said audhorities ordered all Berliners of both
sexes engaged in war-essential work 3
to remain in the: capital even if bombed out of their homes, because of the importance of resuming work in factories snd oftioes as
{Soon as possible.
The Indianapolis Times’ Christ- |
| mas program is double-barrelled
this year. In addition to clothing
needy children, it will provide
Christmas presents and a party for jvounded and ill soldiers at
Marion” county's war hospitals.
The proceeds from the famous |
|. Mile-of- Dimes will go into a gen- | eral fund to be used for both. . 8. 8
OUT OF THE "RUSH HOUR SQUEEZE’ oF THE WAR WORKERS /
BONDSLILLARD
DISTILLERY =|
AND PLEASE 8 CONSIDERATE OF OUR YNOUSANDS OF WAR WORKERS. DON'T CROWD THEM OFF nN THE TRANSIT VENICLES WITH YouR
| PACKAGES /
