Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 30 November 1943 — Page 11
a an oles’ WiLL LOOK LOSE-UP IN FURRED
“ “GENERAL'S WIDOW
thack | Reich Second Day|
(Continiaed From Page One)
pie
“presumably because of weather, for Skhe third straight night. Travelers Sheaching Sweden said some fires = ill were burning in Berlin Monday » from the 7000-ton assault on - the capita
~ night. Berlin Repairs Drag
.. ‘The travelers reported that com2 munications and utilities _siowly “ were being restored in Berlin.
| = Anhalter station was said to have
3 been reopened. . % Other reports reaching Sweden [day ~ said German authorities were at-
‘tempting fo evacuate perhaps hun-
dreds of thousands of Berliners in an. effort to -clear the city of all . non-essential residetits, especially ~ women and children. S.A Bern dispatch said the Nasi agency DIN.B. warned that GerIpany was about to unleash her i “new secret weapon” against Brit-
that ended Ysiday
cannot, as it could not reach German territory.”
Long-Range Gun Hinted - Swiss - sources guessed that -the
daylight yesterday for the second time in four days and the third time this month, Luin The Fortress shot down 20 enemy fighters, Escorting Thunderbolts and Lightnings destroyed 15
‘others. Thirteen Fortresses were lost.
The exact American fighter casualties on the Bremen attack were not announced, but 18 fighters were lost {in all allied operations yesterday.
“SENATOR WILEY RAPS | VETERANS’ PROGRAM
* WASHINGTON, Nov. 30 (U. P).} “Senator Alexander Wiley (R. Wis.) ~gaid in the senate yesterday that -§he administration's program for demobilization pay and unemployment benefits for servicemen fails to appreciate that “these men dol pot want subsidies, they want jobs.” As a solution, Wiley proposed: 1. Each veteran before demobiligation submit a record of preservice employment, service training, “type of job desired and location preferred.
2. Employment experts be assignéd to the veterans’ administration to consult each veteran, and utilize various state and federal fa-
‘gilities to place properly the de-/
mobilized veteran.
NOW WAR WORKER
MARIETTA, Ga., Nov. 30 (U. P..
MTS. Helen D. Longstreet, widow | ski-units took advantage of the snow | erty loss was partly insured. to rush ahead and spread disorder |
of the famous confederate general, today was working as a laborer.on the swing shift at the Bell bomber . plant office here. Mrs. Longstreet, who recently]
plant's upgrading center. BYR 1]
aoh Roping
RUSS TIGHTEN GOMEL PINCERS
Germans Cut Down-as They Move to Evacuate by ‘Lone Railway.
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were the primary defense bastions. Unusually flerce fighting was raging in the area below Zhlobin between the Dnieper and Berezina, {where the Russians were edging for- | ward, Field reports said the ‘advance had (enveloped a number of German
“units” whith ‘were, dootned.
| Despite uncertain footing, the reports said, tanks and self-propelled. |artillery were wallowing ahead while
i" the German ranks. To the south, battles of unabated | | intensity raged on the sweeping arc | beyond Kiev. Dispatches indicated
ing the situation. Soviet reinforcements were re- | ported pouring into the Ukrainian | battle line. from. the Kiev area. |1zvestia, the government newspgper, | |deseribed the Korosten sector north-
NCE. | west of Kiev as a “giant graveyard
"OTARION OF INDIANAPOLIS 511 Chamber of Commerce Bldg. 320-N. Meridian Street , 91
QUINTUPLETS
wMUSTEROLE
wilEst COLDS
Ye lrauptiy Reliovs Gauging
. ang it Suing oa cold — the Dionne Quin chests, ts and backs are rubbed with 10 prof ae Ls rive coughs and sore cont due to J A HTS Sioa and bleak up local congestion in the
ie ah A pangzers ahd. self- -propelied guns forming heaps of shapeless metal.” . {A German communique claimed that in the Kiev-Zhitomir area the
killed, 4800 captured, 603 tanks and 1505 guns between Nov. 9 and 28. Indicating that the - German counterattack there has failed, the communique told of both offénsive and defensive fighting, and said a! Russian force “deployed for a breakthrough attack”, was repulsed. )
HITLER IS WILLING TO DESTROY REICH
_ (Continued From Page One)
plate such an exit. It is true that there seems no place in th® world where they could hope to find sanctuary, no country where they would be safe: But there is one country that could provide a haven, temporarily at least. That is Japan. According to an authoritative British war commentary, it is widely believed in London that the Nazi leaders have made careful plans for their escape when disaster arrives. According to some accounts, there are submarines entirely’ manned by elite 8S. S. men ready to take the Nazi leaders and some military and technical experts to Japan.
useful and probably would be welcomed on that realistic basis. Their hope would . be that Japan could survive the war, at least to the extent of a stalemate, and that one day they could come back to what they picture as a distracted Europe crying for leadership against Bolshevism. ; ’ CAPT. YEANDLE DEAD
‘ST. LOUIS, Nov. 30 (U. P)— Capt. Stephen 8. Yeandle, district
Zanes | SSE, dled 44 1s howe bers Jee
_'terday of cancer. He was 54.
USE YOUR CREDIT "FOR MY DENTAL
|ground and rushed her to the hos-
«| daughter.
{Sherman dr. He and his two chil-
Reith GrAVEYAT onl. PALOURAR. Punyeedy., 85
Russians lost more than 20,000-
There they could make themselves |
coast guard officer of the 9th naval]
Wife Is Seriously
_ (Contifiued From Page One)
pital, “Patrolman Dunwoody was back at the home just about the time the firemen arrived and as tears dampened the eyes of a stern policeman, he pleaded with them to help his
“ Squad: Enters House Into the burning home, up the
Battalion Chief Fred Dilger. Back of him were Firemen Robert Hopwood, Herbert Dwyer, John O’Brien and Dolph - King: : They found the daughter 'Iying on the floor beside her bed. unconscious. They wrapped her in a quilt and carried her downstairs and then rushed her to the hospital. The entire interior of the Dunwoody half of the house, in which he has lived for almost a quarter of century, was destroyed, along with furnishings, The flames spread to the other side of the house, occupied by Mis. Grace O'Grady, her daughter-in-law, Mrs. Joseph O'Grady, and Miss Madonna Hopper. They were awakened by the shouts of Mrs. Dan- | woody while she was on the porch ‘and dashed from the house, Damage to their half of the house was slight. The flames also spread to the home of Harold Harves, 115 N
dren, Jerry Joyce, 14, and Stanley, 13, fled in night attire. Damage tothe home was estimated at about $200. Mrs. Harves was at her defense job at Mallory's.
Cause Unknown
Patrolman Dunwoody was taken to the home of Charles H. Black,
Injured. |
burning stairs went a squad led by |
To Democrat Arthur Walsh of South Orange, N.J, falls the U. 8. senate seat of the late Warren Barbour, Republican, by appointment of Gov. Charles Edison. Walsh is executive vice president of Thomas A; Edison, Ine.
'BELIEVE 13 MISSING ARMY NURSES SAFE
giers, Nov. 30 (U. P..—Thirteen army nurses missing since Nov. 8
Italy are believed safe in allied territory, it was announced today. The plane, a C-47 transport, was | last seen flying into a fog following its takeoff from Algiers for] Bari, on the Italian southeast coast. The nurses were members of an alr evacuation squadron and were
being flown to Italy to accompany |
another series of air ambulances back to North Africa. (The first part of the dispateh received did not indicate the fate of 12 enlisted men and four officers also aboard the transport, but it was presumed that- they also were safe.)
109. N. Sherman dr. « Fire department officials sought to! determine the cause of the blaze.
room on the first floor. The prop- |
Patrolman Dunwoody gained wide | [publicity for his. arrests of. streetcar | smokers, He, is the only officer 10} | make arrests. since the practice was |
: /made an offense under a city ordin- | finished a course ‘in aircraft con-| Gen. Nikolai F. Vatutin was master- |gnce and he bas made 11. strction here, is employed at the)
While he was getting notoriety for |
duty along this line, he and a fellow
| officer encountered and overcame |
two burglars in the school board | omee not long ago. One of them had drawn revolver and after the
marked: “Thank God, we're Stil alive.”
SOVIET-CZECH PACT |
LONDON, Nov. 30
contains an open invitation to] Poland to join both countries in| formal alliances against Germany, informed sources said today. Czech negotiators were sald to have suggested a protocol expressing willingness of the signatories to enter into such compacts with states neighboring Russia and not aligned with the Nazis—a situation pointing definitely to Poland. The mutual aid pact against Germany contains for-the first time in diplomatic history the specific provision that both . countries pledge themselves to combine against traditional German “drang nach osten”— march to the east. Soviet pledges to refrain from (Czech internal affairs after the war
culated to ease the attitude of small European nations toward the Soviet.
SAYS SHIP LOSSES IN GILBERTS LIGHT
~ WASHINGTON, Nov. 30 (U, P). —Secretary of the Navy Frank Knox said today that American ship losses in the Gilbert islands campaign were “light” and that U. 8. planes already are using the
They believe it started in the dining |
BECKONS TO POLAND
(U. P).—A| {treaty between Russia and Czecho-| {slovakia ~ which probably will. be] signed next week-end at Moscow |
-
|
also were included. They were cal- J &
enemy-built air strip on Tarawa He told his news conference that
outbreak of war in 1939, KIWANIS TO MEET
Noah Bailharz, character “actor in!
“Americana,” will present characterizations of “heroic, simple, com-
If
g Mail nH...
wT 10 RAN
on a flight from North Africa to]
British 8th
‘Cracks Nazi | (mous funicular a Shin br Gem
Ww ; from. their steep hillside homes| og popular ; | inter HR to the city proper since 1880, Spined- world | —-
resumed operation today — |altied military supervision, The funiculars, whose cogwheel direction of Ametican engineers.
(Continued From Page One)
Pi miles northwest near Fossacesia'. {and through Aramagnoli
Said © Be En Route to
- Stalin Parley. : -Capture of the heights— first- be. (Continued From Page One) {yond the broad Sangro valley— |
collaboration among the allies and! would complete the rupture of the the campaign in the Far East. German line, placing Montgomery's Military, air and naval experts men firmly past their first obstacle agreed that bases for allied air The heights range from 750 to 1000 forces will be a decisive factor in g.a¢ determining the duration of Jap-| anese resistance. The fierce fighting took place Bases at Viadivostock would bring | under one of the heaviest artillery Japan within 600 miles and enable barrages of the Itallan campaign! allied bombers to mount an around- and an increasing number of pris-| the-clock aerial offensive wugainst| Japan. some: described as literally | Britain and the United States] “bomb-happy,” were falling ingo | presumably have avoided pressing | the- 8th's hands. The sky was filled | Stalin for any promises sa long. as| with, allied planes for the seventh | | the European war remained critical, straight day. but with the campaign reaching a climax; unofficial observers believed i Rain Threatened | the time has come for Mr. Roose-| An overcast that threatened. rain | wo velt and Churchill to seek some sort|—bane of the allies for weeks—hung | of assurance of eventual Soviet help | over the 8th’s battle area. in the Far East. Reports indicated the bridgeheads | | | Stalin's View Conjectural { just inland from the sea and around ||
Stalin’ {Archi had not yet been linked but alin’s reaction to such a request | owed the 8th's forges were rolling |
[1s problematical, but it was pre-|,..oce in increasing numbers Wo! {sumed he would at least want strong | pitch into battle. {assurances that Soviet forces, be-| .The 5th's advance was hewn out | (cause of their probable exhaustion. |in the face of terrific enemy artilneed not participate in the fight! ery fire, while American and Brit. | against Japan or help ward off Jap- sh forces “brought up more and] {anese counter-attacks. , , (more guns to engage in gun duels | Stalin's attitude presumably nis | with the Germans [would be governed considerably the extent to which he feels Russia | ID 'has been obligatéd by ee fousein | KIDNAP TRIAL OPENS ah ican assistance in the European war.| LOUISVILLE, Ky, Nov. 30 (U. © 5 4
———ei [PV =The re-trial of Thomas H. = ! : NE : R & {p. m. Thursday at 437 Prospect st. and sentenced to life imprisonment, /
i AUXILIARY WILL, MEET ‘Robinson Jr., 36, convicted m 1036 Canton Indianapolis No. 2 andiof kidnaping socially prominent | ladies’ auxiliary will meet ‘at 7:45 Mrs. Alice Speed Stoll of Louisville | Hostesses will be Mrs. Iva Herriot, ‘began today before Federal Judge: wn gad Anna Gaynor and Fairy Armel. - Shackleford Miller. ” 4 vy aa plaka
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No. 16 in a Series Presenting Our Stat
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Personal Service by our skilled staff is given to all. Prices are within the means of every family in Marion County.
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Tiny Things “en But They Mean So Much .
~ CHRI TMAS SEALS |
RUE they’ re just tiny pieces of ornamental paper to decorate our letters and parcels at Christmas time—but . . .
BACK OF THEM ... is the National Tuberculosis Association, made up of hundreds of state and local associations, all striving toward one goal . . .
To Combat and Stamp Out Tuberculosis
BACK OF THEM... +. 18 a program of education for better living .;<” for free clinics . . . for sanitoria . . . for public nursing stiffs to work among school children and_ industrial workers.
BACK OF THEM ... is our own MARION COUNTY TUBERCULOSIS ASSOCIATION, which is proud of its achievement in cutting down the death rate from tuberculosis in Marion County from 224.7 per 100,000 population in 1914 to 56.4.in 1942, a reduction of approximately 75 per cent.
BACK OF THEM . . . is the Julia Jameson Nutrition Camp for frail children—the rehabilitation program at Sunnyside - Sanatorium—the principal for the school at Sunnyside—literature—books—posters—x- -raying—all furnished through your local association.
WON'T YOU, TOO, GET BACK OF THEM?
You Should “Seal” It... Out of each Christmas Seal dollar, 5% goes to the National ~ Tuberculosis control program and 12% goes to the Indiana State
program. The 83% remains here In Marion county to fight tuberculosis.
Dedicated to the Marion County Tuberculosis Assn. wo
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