Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 27 December 1943 — Page 2
strat, through “Hh the Japasere larger irate with guns, food ana] = “E Taylo vert Jenkins Killed: GLOUCESTER INVADE ave b been moving supplies and = W A W THIS SuBplies were right at at their heels.” GER N n the W. War ronts ; s . i" ments to Rabaul. ‘ y reported a eh sciiurs” sommes | ANDED: UNOPPOSED! 2irsars, 22, tree ELIMINATED : J ON NEW BRITAIN chant he oruslons increased the asd on one small auxiliary craft phn 2, 143) : 3 m 's Supply lane’ | (Continued From Page One) ACH tun With peas misses, ‘MOSCOW, Dec. 27 (U, Py —Gen, | HTALY—5th army forces win two {Continue ? y Vatutin's @rmy of the * | raided “enemy positions” on. the mand of the Bismarck sea” - (could be seen. Immediately, com- Jd Ee ve nel Seren Nikolai F. : ha B a y so.| Appenines in threat to Rome the earliest re {ing in across the water, a forma- per-| Ukraine swept wesiward on a | road: 8th army tightens circle on of Valencia. % manpower com- | Tg i American and Australian cruisers visas Tor the war pow | a | joined Liberator and Mitchell] The “eastern approaches to the, jover the target and laid down a ‘BLIMP DIRECT AID AID | Koroesten railroad today, pressing the start on & Survivors besides nts | 4 oo we ®& bombers in the final phase of a y ors hes hs wo terrific air-and-sea bombardment bY an American carrier task force could be seen by the naked. eye T0 SHIP SURVIVORS | which in three days had regained | fensive advances 25 miles on 50- the quayside ¢ ] ; i* | that completely pulverizedd Japd-|Wnose planes sank a Japanese de-| falling over the target area. ‘ | WASHINGTON, Dec. 21 (U. {almost two-thirds of the territory |’ mile front west of Kiev; 15,000 hazard, to say Great Lakes haval training sta- in a Christmas d id on K Ma 5. 2 Time means n a Christmas day raid on Kavieng battle. loucester. ' came in from different ‘directions Vatutin's drive had ended a Gertion, and Gerald Jénkins, and a | & |New. Ireland, 150 miles northwest of | three patrol blimps were instru- | than to goats: NDERSON and the white smoke along the man threat to Kiev, and had’ sel| WESTERN EUROPE—British home J oF AN And zen - yg The air phase actually covered Another destroyer and a patrol The planes flew almost at tree- ‘top |the Cuban freighter Libertad after ;yroine again striking out toward | fee sinks 16000-ton Nazi bat- had to wait. - a . Ca Fsor 3 | 11 days, during which allied bomb- boat were damaged, three barges! height. they had floated for more than 30 the pre-war Polish border some 75| P srphorst, Berlin ree daylight hour: jo! the Gilbert islands. He - k ‘ers dropped 2500 tons of explosives. ad et - band of Mrs. Helen ; The last bombs and shells still were ships and barges were hit, the com- | waves. Then, overhead, large “for- |S Bivronss, ; At some points on the rim of the| French invasion coast. spectors whos i; munique said. | mations of Lightning and Thun-| e Libertad was > early innew expanding Kiev salient, Soviet |PACIFIC—Marine veterans land Yency control tJ » u 4 . 3 n & . Missi EL ; marine jungle veterans pushed off| jaimed in a communique today that | their protection to the entire scene Carolina coast after “two under- | most advanced positions béfore the enemy's Cape Gloucester base on everything exc Missing | £ he from the mother ships in scores of Japanese naval warplanes attacked below. |water explosions were heard.” Nazi command flung its best forces, northwestern tip of New, Britain. Gibraltar la STEPHENS, husband of Mrs. 5 gn | With the "occupation of Long saturday evening following the [the last of the attack planes came Missing. [to stem the Russian drive westward. | 10 MILLION PATIENTS the Spanish | 218 Kenwood ; iF Island and Cape Gloucester, the ma- Kavieng raid “in waters north of over and the first marines went| The three navy blimps — K-72,| vatutin's army routed four Ger-| WASHINGTON — It has been only automobil ave. has been missing: in action % 4 : on : domination of the 54-mile-wide centified warship with the loss of | protection of the jungle even before ors clinging to the wreckage at —a total of 135,000 men—and killed | persons are treated annually in. the on a 50-mile he son of Mrs. Flora He is the sO pl ing over Burma. re — TS A me _- — a — nt - make the 30-1 been overseas since Oct. 1, 1943. 1,» 0 © Amy Gosman, Beech from Tangier
that Ja UNITED PRESS : eph (Continued From Page One) fa oo “our growing com- paying a a price of 36 dive bombers strategic hills. Swarm down 3 r= La { cape.) ! Threaten Bismarck § ne Iather is clearance supe 4 pe. ea [tion of Liberators appeared, y{onnel, Dunn said. mile front against the Zhitomir-| Ortona. other types of Bismarck sea already were menaced |joad of 28 tons of bombs which | la new offensive in the Kiev salient RUSSIA—New Russian winter of- : Ji n 2-c, stationed at b f 108 Jre SSEA wo nese ground defenses on Cape stroyer and three big supply ships| A other formation. of Liberators | ‘|lost in five weeks. Germans killed in three-day {—The navy revealed today that] . Miss Katherine Jenkins... | WF § A [ rines Follow Bombers sister r : Mstiaes | Rabaul. | waterfront rolled on for miles. mental in rescuing 18 survivors of |4.. pussian forces of the northwest | Moslem non-g of Beech Grove, was killed in were sunk and several small cargo| pgitchellss came in ‘succeeding hours on planks, rafts and cap-|miles beyond their battle line. | ports allied commando landing arrival at Alge rson, 1469 S. Meridian st. ! ster wh Anders falling on Cape Gloucester when the| 0 14) Japanese headquarters derbolt planes appeared, lending the morning of Dec. 4 off the North forces had driven beyond ~ their| unopposed on both sides of eomb look jiik SECOND LT. THOMAS A. | ff NG \ghmmpeme: : blunt-noseéd landing craft. \the American carrier task force, “At exactly 7:42 a m. Sunday, IWenty-five crew members are still against the bulge in a desperate bid | But the harbo ina A. Stephens, 22 rines will have completed their Bougainville” and sank one uni- | ashore, heading cautiously to the K-76 and K-82—sighted the surviv- imdn tank and six infantry divisions! (ound that more than 10,000,000 lish Morris ru over Burma since Nav. 27. . , : Lt. Thomas A. Stephens ... miss- |Vitiaz strait and adjoining Dampier! four planes. ' ‘the small barges turned away. The widely scattered points. 15,000 officers and men, 'bospitals of the United States. Spain. Thus Stephens of Indianfpolis and has - — E - - Once arrive I ————————————
He is 25, Grove, has been wounded in acEntering the service in Febru- ©. "0 10 ary, 1841, Lt. Stephens received The 30-year-old soldier entered his training in Mississippi and at | . army two Scott field, Ill. He formerly Ww: Fd y vears ago and employed by Schwitzer-Cummir has been overs Lt. and Mrs. Stephens wel : as nearly one : > married two months before he wa. I SN inducted. © She is now employed Th 1 vears. He was STRA in the navy office at RC co f employed at
Other Hooslers ol ! ¥ Schwitzer-Cum . ing list are T. Sgt wrence F. oo. : a Lord, son of Mrs. Helen I ord, * {i OLhET Pt. Wayhe, and T. Sgt nald received word E. Turnipseed, husband of hy that he was 2 Lois Turnipseed HfaSelia gaol : ’ a wounded Nov. ® missing in ti iropean theater, Pvt. Gosman . and 2d Lt seph F. Cotton 2 hers inded in this war ‘ of Mrs. Ell SOL tushvil zotie are Pf ohn A East, son in -the Mediterranean area rs Ruth Kerns, Wheatfield; hn ' Pp Melvit o George, son of Fads
MARTIN FRANCIS KELLY, linam George, Anderson; seaman 1-c in the navy, is mis Cpl. Andy M. Jurik, son of Andy ing in action is tl on of Ju La Porte; Sgt Robert B Mr. and Mrs. Timothy Kell Ta) {owalczyk, son of Mrs. Julia Kolittle Mills, and husband of M walczvk, Gary; fc. Harold E Helen C. Kelly, St. Cron Sidebottom, sot! f Mrs. Lola 1. S n; pvt. Walter of Mrs. Myrtle | : Honored ,.Chalmers; Pfc. John B 8. SGT. CHARLES A FEATH- | grallman, son of Mrs. Mathilda L. ERSTONE, husband of Vrs Stallman. Dale Pfc. Waldo B Retha Featherstone, 1079-Led#ind- | gy) on of Henry Stultz, Orton ave. has been awarded ti AI leat vt Steve J. ‘cisel. son i medal and 13 oak leaf cluste: of Mrs Mart} Weisel, South WITH stars in their eyes and a lilt in their every He is now stationed at the army send and Teeh. Elmer G Young air forces redistribution station 1 VN Frhel Young, Oakland ) Miami, Fla Cite step. Looking loveliar than they have ever looked before in clothes Sgt. Featherstone, who is 28 oo ” entered the army in February, | Prisoner such as these that help to brighten the corner 1942, and has flown 50 combat mi LT HARD ANTRI j ‘sfons in the Mediterranean a dd rae on an B-24 bomber radio operator and | | . uy Bi ARDSLEY ¢ ‘where they are: give a sotiwyoung ragiance wherever gunner. | of Che le Cw. Be - n ”
Wounded they we listed a PVT. PAUL B GOSM AN. son missing <n action Co ne Shop. sty | with a candid clear eyed charm.
SIMMS ‘ANSWERS! The Customer ls | x. THE RIDDLE OF ‘44 Always in Right
CLEVELAND, Déc 27 jU Fs z Collegienne Shop—Second Floor.
they may go.
{Continued From Page One)
Turkey, too, fears Russia It i only natural that she might want ! 1stomer, . } nt turned up his It's sweet and it's sophisticated! The before she places her bet. | Tern i up p Ln d i" b Apa . rose at Glick's dwii g stock of black “dress-up” dress with new In the Middle East, the armis hirt it likea me he brief sleeves, bead accented low will come to life. Several hundred mang was wearing Glick round neckline. 29.95,
to have another look at her card
thousand British, Polish, In ) other troops concentrated there will IERIE RLY ypeiiavee It's new and it's news! The checked invade the Balkans, probably via rt, wrapped it and the Topper coat in vélveieen accented Turkey. This will be tl | for, Customer walked oul dugniy sat- 1007, wool. Black or brown. 25.00.
the signal ol Hungaria, Rumania and Bulgari: , . quit. Hitler faces in 1944 the sam Ia SD RLANL oF 3. It's soft and it's simple. The 1944 fate Kaiser Wilhelm II met in 191g | 0 commeiised, BEE ats tHe... suit master-tailored by Handmacher HESOIGIN CRS in 1007, wool, in pretty pastel col-
Hitler's own doom is ors. 39.95,
certain for 1944. He probably be purged by the Junkers the... 1 thot we <l tha Reichswehr, who will then try to... Lo ee ! It's, casual and it's charming! One= make a compromise pear Rg an on CHE . piece dress with striped chambray SRR Race jewel-buttoned blouse; dark rayon crepe skirt, 22.95.
in this they may be by the German masses the allies will Hitler and render. The roll if they the life of the their own s Eventually army an 4 pe ave to : . i, The bettin ig bout ven t ieseyyttles, Russia will
sed cs + or nar oo. BRITAIN ON VERGE
“xt: 1944 to see history's blood-
will give us bas beria—which am thing. She f the brunt of 4}
Schools Bec City-Wide “Waste Paper Collection
(Continued From Page Onc
Jan. 8-Schools 44, 30, 75, 67 5 and 16 Jan. T—8chools 6 Jan. 11—-8¢
and 85. Jan. 12—Srhool ) BO wsiastically n and 91 CTT . plan. It vy step up thé war effort Jan. 13-—8chools B4, 27, 29, 45, 55. a great deal ‘¢ won't be as 'y 56 and 10 eu much paper per lection as beJan. 14—Schools 1, 73, 36, 37, 60 fore, but in t long run there will | and 68 : be more.” : Jan. 18S | Jan. 19—8 ! Jan. i and 2. t Jan. 1 —S8chools, 82.77. 57 and 58 A fl 1 the Bb Jan. 25--Schools 72 64 35. 18 use of scrap paper have bees sent 20 and 79. public s S Jan. 26—Schools 34, 32 x 19 and 25. ’ Funds for Bonds . 1 Jan. 27—Scheols 85 82 21 13 Brown and corrug@ted paper is especially ne since it is used I materials of war, ih- : - g blood plasma, fragile radio | ’
containers out to the sc rly | airplan e engine parts and enough. The schedule h ' a DY 1. compasses. Paper is also ranged #0 as not to interfere with Used for map makin 18 } , Pats Friday, another war effatt of roceeds from- the’ sale of paper the public schools. is handled by the P.-T. A. in pub- : - Cat} Schools hie 9 ols Most of the money will ( $, and some into books ‘The Pebruary schedule for ele- and supplies, and record players mentary Catholic schools is as fol- end public, address systems: if they dows: (The public schoo) schedule are available. month will be announced! Mr. Morgan was confident that % the school children and their parJoan of Are. St. Peter ents would make the drive a sucHoly Angels, St. Thomas cess. “THe only real problem \is as and St. Rita. | transportation, and we hope that
Anthony, St. Ann, many people will be able to offer] i SE ST pag . ey oe 1. KR (8
Joseph aug ret. vehiclgs,” he said. “The public must be educated” tos Hinow the collection Lin in their |
