Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 30 November 1943 — Page 7
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IST DIES [., Nov. 30 (UU, Fairchild, 93, 1 professor of history at the ester for 33 ment in 1920,
is of
at
is the only course for Germany deHitler and other Nazi leaders.
able to muster sufficient strength to
© "in western Europe, the letter was ~ quoted as saying.
; Duy. ‘was not stated. a
"OPA EASES RULING
: bought by motorists heretofore
i ‘tres “for commercial yehisks with -cameliack.
cost.” The purported appearance of the letter, which was sald to be circulating throughout France in pamphlet
form, coincided with recent reports i
from Berlin that the German high command has decided capitulation
spite contrary views held by Adolf
(U. 8. Secretary of State Cordell Hull in Washington yesterday bluntly discounted German . peace rumors as a Nasi-sttempt to weaken the allied war effort.)
Allied Power Stressed The French generals’ letter, re-
défeat and urged the Government to throw off the Nazi yoke “at all
ports from Vichy said, outlined in| ga
statistical detail the tremendous material superiority of .the allies over Germany, particularly in war production, Allied air and seapower alone were sufficient for victory and invasion from the west is necessary only for the kill, the letter was said to maintain, With 3,500,000 Geran troops killed, wounded or captured on the eastern front, Germany will be un-
resist allied armies of some 2,000,000 when they decide to force the issue
~The letter was said to conclude with a stirring appeal to Laval to disregard personal risk in taking all possible. measures to free France from German domination. Just what Laval could do, however, ap-
off the map!
German itinecrs in AGF 0s bang-up lob of wiping. Wis road Winding near the summit of .a steep hill in the path of the British 8th army's drive on Isernia, the road was wrecked when the Nazis blasted away a considerable chunk of the hill. But the unbeatable eighth by-passed the road and pushed ahead.
By HENRY SHAPIRO United Press Staff Correspondent KIEV, (Via Moscow, Nov. 30) (U. P.).—In battle-scarred Kiev, the white-bearded director of the Kiev zoological museum, Prof. Viadimir Ahlovky. stood in-front of his
- ‘shew -cases.-and. wept for, his prod >
butterflies.
ON TIRE PURCHASES
WASHINGTON, Nov. 30 (U. P)
- =—The office of price administration |
today took two steps toward easing | a tire situation aggravated by the continued shortage of new tires, OPA ruled that tires made chiefly reclaimed rubber may be!
eligible only for used tires. The order reclassified such tires from grade 1 (new) to grade IIT (used). At the same time, OPA removed rationing restrictions on recapping
2 a wi er's
BENGAL AIRFIELD BOMBED NEW DELHI, Nov. 30 (U. P.).— Japanese bombers, with fighter escort, attacked an airfield in east-. ern Bengal yesterday “but caused only slight damage, a communique sald today.
I just had returned from a trip to the. Baby ‘Yar—the ravine of death where, officials of Kiev said, |85,000 to 125,000 Jews, Communists
{and war prisoners were slaughtered |
and buried; I had seen piles of rubble where once had stood “the modern, symetrical buildings along the Kreschiatik, Kiev's Broadway; I had watched the gaunt women of Kiev lowering buckets into the water mains because there was no water supply.’ Destroy Specimens And here was a venerable savant of 69 in tears. Tears not for the scores ‘of thousands slaughtered, the colby ruined tears. dor phiterny but Yerflies, Here at last, in ‘from the incredible horror of Baby Yar, was grief related to the believable. Baby Yar had the unbelievable quality of a Nightmare,
Artobolovsky said the Nazis wan-
tonly had destroyed the, academy
Weeps Over His Butterflies In Midst of Kiev's Horrors
of sciences, the zoological museum and the University of Kiev, one of
Russia's oldest institutions of higher}
learning. . He led visiting correspondents past broken show cases in his museum, pointing to the remnants of ~the Collections - of Flora and Fauna. - . “They, stole my collection of butterflies on which I had worked for 40 years,” he said tearfully. ‘4 had 800,000. specimens.” (There were 200,00 Jews in Kiev and now there are six.) He sald the Nazis burned 6,000,000 books and destroyed 2,000,000 200-~ logical Items, } Demolish Rare Skeleton (Kiev officials said old men, women and children were slaughtered at the Baby Yar and their bodies incinerated in an effort to remove the evidence.)
. When the university was put tof
the terch, the, Germans destroyed a rare Speleton fo mammoth found. years ago near Kremechug. rT (Correspondents found” bits of human bones in the sand pits of Baby Yar.)
The old man of science talked on
and on. Butterflies , . . butterflies. , . . Baby Yar.
1A Forced Into Brothels
committee charged in a pamphlet
{bluntly informed a trainload of girls
tery in a single night.
For Soldiers.
Germans were accused by the interallled information committee today of enslaving thousands of ‘teen-age girls from ‘all occupied Europe for soldiers’ brothels, In Poland alone, hundreds of the most attractive girls in many towns were. sejzed on the subterfuge that
but six months later they straggled home, diseased and pregnant, the
“Women Under Axis Rule.” A German gauleiter in Luxemburg
leaving for Germany that “you'll be proud to return as German |_moth-
ers,” the pamphlet said. Requisition House
The mayor of Piraeus, Greece, was said to have been ordered by the Germans to requisition a house as a brothel and to fill it with “girls of good social standing” for the! pleasure of the occupation forces.
Before they surrendered, the pamphlet said, Italian soldiers would seduce 13 to 15-year-old girls in Greece with offers of bread ration cards.
But prostitution was only one of the crimes charged against the axis in the cammittee’s indictment, based on eye-witness reports, official pronouncements from axis Newspapers | and -other matter,
Murder, - torture and starvation were included and typical cases included: .
Die of Disease
FRANCE: Thousands of women thrown in concentration camps, where in one instance a daily fare of two boiled- potatoes was the only sustenance. Two hundred inmates of & camp nedr Paris died of dysen-
CRETE: Women publicly executed as guerrillas if their shoulders were found to have bruises caused by the “kick” of a rifle-butt. Mothers and children forced to witness execution of their men, dig their graves, then cook and keep house for the executioners,
1000 Czech women, if not several thousands, have been murdered. Many hundreds of girls raped and tortured and about 10,000 deported to concentration camps.
women bestially tortured,
EE
in -the Stalino region sald: “The ditch, is overflowing with bodies. I.must admit that the Bolshevik youth behave heroically; some of them, particularly the girls, did not shed a tear when we shot them.
They were ordered to undress , . .”
~ New Way to Handle Payrolls
“, is the measure of business, as money is of I wares!’ So said the great Francis Bacon three
Conserves Hours of Precious Time
hundred years ago.
Today, under the increasing strains of war, time is not only the measure of business —it is the most critical material we possess. And the measure of American genius is its ability to create more time by finding quicker, better ways to forge a shell, mold a plastic,
harvest a crop, or handle a payroll.
A FOR INSTANCE this week many offices will produce today’s complex payroll recordsinone-half the time formerly consumed. This despite the new “load” added by the Withholding Tax,
A THE REASON —a new payroll plan by
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ack guy 0 U0 SOVEESE haha vei:
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act amount he has on
ATT 1)
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writer or by hand.
copyof it? ie
terly reports and government inspection. ‘Rewriting of figures is entirely
Entirely eliminated, too, are separate records for War Bonds, Social Security, Withholding Tax, employee insurance, employee hospitalization, union dues -and all other ledger records of a similar
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A so SIMPLE is the OPFOR” payroll system that any clerk can handle it. It can be adapted to any type of payroll whether you pay by check or in cash— whether you make your entriel by type-
A A COMPLETE FOLDER has been prepared, illustrating the “KoP1-8POT” and explaining its application to various payroll methods May We send you 4
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~ LONDON, Nov. 30 (U. P.).~The|}
they were needed for factory work, x
CZECHOSLOVAKIA: At least}
POLAND: Prison hospitals full of | if.
“RUSSIA: The ‘diary of a sldier |}
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