Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 11 May 1944 — Page 8
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American and British bombs, the newspaper said. Stockholm dispatches said Rommel had told his West Wall commanders that they must expect the allies to use the most modern equipment ever unveiled on =a battlefield. Rommel also revealed that spe- | cialists in street fighting have been | organized to man a second line of | detense behind the coastal forti!fications. The new units were formed around a nucleus of troops who fought the British and Cana-
|dians at St. Nazaire and Dieppe, {he said, and will be armed with new and surprising weapons.”
2
| { help resist any
Form New French Army
In Algiers, Interior Commissioner . Emmanuel D’Astrier de La Vigerie
— of the French national committee
disclosed that the committee soon will incorporate members of the French underground formally into {the French army under the name ‘of “French Army of the Interior.” {German estimates have placed the). | Sderground army at 175,000 per-|
Te official German DNB agency |= that 1,400,000 men had | been enlisted last month in a | “sharpshooting organization of the German people,” organized by the Nazi party militia as an axis ver/sion of the British home guard to invasion of the | reich. Military sources here said that the {united nations appeared to be: wins ning the pre-invasion battle of
brains against axis spies and that | there have been no leaks on such | vital information as the date of D-
day and other allied invasion plans. All Merely Guesswork
“Civilians are basing their prognostications (on the invasion date)
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Jovasion Bre’ Fear Mounts From End to End of Europe
‘on their own imaginations and
{joint allied blows from the east and
what they read in the papers,” an officer said. He disclosed that counter-espion-age agents are filtering through troop units in the British isles to offset the axis agents known to be at work. They loiter unobtrusively in pubs, restaurants and other public gathering places and monitor thousands of telephone lines. Little can be revealed now of German spying, but the officer commented: “It's now or never for them. They have had their greatest chance to gather the most information in the shortest time. They undoubtedly are trying to take advantage of it.” Northern Ireland was described by the officer as a “constant threat” to milftary security.
Russians Are Ready,
Molotov Asserts
MOSCOW, May 11 (U. P.).—Foreign Commissar Viacheslav M, Molotov has promised that Germany “soon” will feel the full strength of
west, Moscow newspapers reported today as another lull settled over the Russian front,
“Now the time has come when the armed forces of the allies are preparing for decisive joint operations against our common enemy,
will soon feel the strength of the joint blows,” Molotov was quoted as saying in a speech thanking British Ambassador Sir Archibald Clark Kerr yesterday for conferring 118 British decorations on Soviet soldiers. Military observers expected the | present lull in ground action to continue until the “decisive Joint operations” designed to squeeze Germany out of the war begin. Front dispatches reported that a pall of smoke from German demolitions and the destruction wrought | by Soviet bombs and shells still! hangs over Sevastopol, Crimean | naval base liberated Tuesday after a three-day battle.
Weather Improving
On Soviet Fronts
LONDON, May 11 (U. P.).—Russia is ready! The fall of Sevastopol cleared the | last obstacle to full Soviet partici- | pation in the Tehran master plan!
laying a carpet of bombs on German airdromes at Beaumont-le-Roget and Cormeilles-en-Vexin. All the Marauder medium and Havoc light bombers returned, encountering no German fighters. Another force of Marauders this afternoon bombed the Pas de Calais, where the Germans were reported to have set up rocket guns. At midafternoon, soon after a 15minute bomber parade over the southeast coast, heavy explosions rumbled across from France. The bulk of the British-based night-raiding fleet of 500 heavy bombers smashed at railway yards at Lille and Lens, northern France, and Gent and Courtrai, Belgium, temporarily cutting key supply lines to Germany's west wall defenses at all four places.
for the smashing of Germany, allied military experts said today. If} invasion in the West depends on/ Russian preparations for the grand, | two-way offensive, those preparations are complete, they said. Only the weather remains a doubtful factor. A survey of weath-
er conditions on the various Rus-|
sian fronts between the Baltic and the Black sea follows: Southern Sector—The radio for the last week has been stressing the hardened ground in
this section, where the Russians are] Hitlerite Germany, and the enemy¥getting in position for a
drive through the Galatz gap to Ploesti's oil, capture of which probably
would knock Romania out of the]
war, Ground: Still Soft Central Sector — Latest available in London indicate ground still is a little soft in sector which the Nazis know is the shortest route to Berlin. Weather - experts believe this ground will be suitable for high speed armor about the middle of this month barring any unusual fall of rain. This sector includes Lygow, | which will be Russia's first major objective due to its control of rail and road communications. White Russia—This area, guard-| ing the gateway to the Polish plain] and Lithuania, still is wet and the marshlands are soggy from winter, SNOWS. North Russia—The ground here! hardens about the end of May, |when a drive to clear the Baltic! | states is expected tosstart. It still has some snow patches.
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{Continued From Page One)
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