Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 24 August 1944 — Page 6
PAGE 6 CHURCHILL SEES GREEK ROME, Aug. 24 (U. P).—Prime Nu sr Winston Churchill con- } with Greek Premier George pandreou Monday on Greece's military and political situation, alPed headquarters said last night.
Dumbarton Oaks Diplomats Meet Midst Little People
build up armies, and then we were " . in another war, all of us finally. movie is at the ejgorhoo Woodrow Wilson foresaw all that, theater. {He tried to get the nations of ‘the - They do not know, for few ever|word together in some sort of an have tried to tell them, even NOW, {organization—they called it the that this mysterious thing called|jeague of nations—to prevent it. In “foreign affairs” has a great deal 10| his Jast message to congress he do with what happens to them In|ywarned, too, of the wrath to come the future, with their bread and|pere at home in domestic policies meat, their houses, the education ipa were adopted, which shut us
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of their children, yes, what is going | or from the rest of the world. on right now behind the spreading| It's all ironical and a bit sad trees where the soldiers walk their {when you look at it simply, those beats. diplomats going about their busiThey know only vaguely what it|ness so mysteriously and secretly, as
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{has to do with their sons and jf they lived in another world, and | husbands and brothers going off 0 | those people who live on’ the war in strange places, some dead | fringes of the Georgetowns qf. the |already, some wounded, SOME country, and nobody ever trying to jachingly “missing” in that far|pridge the gap, to tear away the |away, shadowy batfle of the litue|veil, to yank off the braid and do {men. * They do not know what it|away with the protocol and the {has to do with whether the young- pomp and the panoply which is, {sters chasing about out there in after all, so much tinsel. [the streets, doging automobiles, will| Woodrow Wilson pledged “open also have to go far away to fight covenants openly arrived at.” ‘when they grow up. He didn’t keep his pledge. Then War Again Are we going through all that Nor would they understand if you: again?
PLEDGE TO EASE BIG 3 NEWS GAG
Stettinius Promises Reporters More Information on Security Talks.
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exchanges of views on the general nature of an international security organization, the results of which are subject to the approval of our respective governments. We hope, after we have had opportunity for the fullest and freest exchange of
THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
(Continued From Page One)
said it had “confirmed” that Michael appealed to the Romanian army to cease fighting against the Soviets, but Moscow dispatches reported the battle still was continuing in northern Romania. (A CBS broadcast from Bern quoted Swiss? reports that the Romanians were fighting German units in the Black sea port of Constanta and fighting Hungarian forces on the Hungarian border. Most of Romania was said to be
Report Bulgaria Asks Peace, Hungarian Arm aks With Germany
be required to hold a special permit to circulate after curfew, the decree
In Revolt as Romania Breaks
viewpoints, to arrive at agreed rec- [firmly in Romanian hands.) ommendations which we can submit| Reliable sources in Cairo said to our respective governments.” (Bulgaria had begun. withdrawing Cadogan warned ‘the delegates|}ts troops from occupied territory Monday that they must work “fast| ln Yugoslavia. and well” because the war in Eu-| Radio Sofia was broadcasting rope might be' over earlier than|Only at intervals and reliable some think, and’ President Roose-|SOurces in Cairo believed “somevelt also stressed the need for speed | thing strange” was under way in yesterday. The three powers are in| the Bulgarian capital. The Geragreement that some sort of nrgan- Mans may have seized. the station ization should be created before the to prevent any peace movement European phase of the war is over,| &nhouncement, Cairo said. if possible. | A Romanian home broadcast The correspondents. asked for an|heard by BBC disclosed that the
{told them that it had a lot to do — he TRAFFIC
{with that gaunt depression of t early 30s. They still remember / i | that. They do not know that what | OFF 3.5% IN JULY happened in “foreign affairs” after! The state highway department | «he last war helped to bring that reported today that July traffic | m and to itself, building up tariff {the volume during the correspond- | {walls our own country building ours |ing month in 1943. | so Thigh that those nations over! Automatic traffic counters in 23] [there which owed us money could locations over the state showed a { not pay what they owed us and! 23 per cent decrease on U. S. 6. East | |securities went bad, and it all of Nappanee, with increases regis-| {backed up on our banks and they tered on Ind. 9. South of Rome City; {cracked, and the savings of the lit-|Ind. 54, east of the junction with|
where were gone. { And then everybody began
to on Ind. 29, north of Versailles. "4
all about—every nation living with-| volume was only 3.5 per cent below | after a 2%:-hour conference with
tie =peoplexin. Georgetown -and else meth Sr dis id, Sa 31-north-of-Argusrrmens-have been preserved for-stidy [ Ind. 13, south of North Webster, snd or display embedded in blocks of
interview with Stettinius several | military commander in Bucharest hours before John Foster Dulles, had issued a decree forbidding all foreign policy adviser for Governor public assembly and ordering an
Thomas E. Dewey, told reporters 8 p. m. to 5 a. m. curfew in the
said. All streetc: and public vehicles were orde to cease service at 8 p. m. Infringements of the curfew will be punished by imprisonment up to four years. Michael ordered a general mobilization of all armed forces to march “at the side of the allied armies.” Berlin Rails Angrily
Berlin railed angrily at the “cowardly treachery” of Michael and his “Anglophile” supporters, and asserted that disorders had broken out throughout Romania in the wake “of the monarch’s peace appeal. The German DNB news agency said a “national group of patriots” already had organized against the king and had called upon the army to continue the fihgt. The surrender of Romania laii open the entire Balkans to ‘he allies and posed an ultimate threet of encirclement over German forces holding Bulgaria, Greece and southern Yugoslavia, all south or southwest “of Romania. Germany also faced imminent loss of the Ploesti oil field, the largest single source of oil for her
| capital, : Secretary of State Cordell Hull: “I'm inclined to think that there gould be more information given than is being given about the Dumbarton Oaks conference.”
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A Soviet communique, while not mentioning the armistice, said fighting already had broken out between the Germans and Romanians in northern Romania, where two Russian armies were pounding southward toward the Galati gap, gateway to Bucharest and Ploesti. : Romania prisoners were said to have told the, Russians that the Germans were firing on Romanian units which sought to retreat. Michael ordered all hostilities against the Russian army to cease immediately, but there was no confirmation yet that the Romanians had laid down their arms. Germany apparently was caught off balance by Romania's defection, but was expected to make every effort to retrieve the situation. The Nazi command was known to have had 16 divisions — possibly 160,000 men—in Romania last spring, but since has drawn heavily on that force to meet great threats to her borders in Poland and France.
Nazi Situation Serious If attacked by both Romanians and Russians, Germany was believed to have little hope of holding Romania.
Not until nearly 12 hours: after Michael's proclamation was broad-
URSDA
, AUG. 24, 1944
German radio mention the armistice, and then it sought to rally the Romanian people to the Nazi cause on the grounds that “traitors” were ° handing the country over “to the | Bolsheviks.” < Rr (Another - German broadcast recorded by the FCC, called on the Romanian people to obey only the orders of a Romanian national government which it said had been formed to continue fighting “togeth~ er with the Germans against Russian Bolshevism.” The broadcast | did not identify the members of the government.) ; Michael removed Premier Ion Antonescu, who largely was responsible for Romania's pro-Nazi - course, and replaced him with Gen. Constantin Sanatescu at the helm of an all-party cabinet,
Report Antonescu Has Fled
(A Bern broadcast recorded by CBS said Antonescu had fled to Germany.) Michael said the “Big Three” had guaranteed the independence of Rumania and her internal affairs and
have “recognized the injustice of the Vienna dictate by which Trane sylvania was torn from us.”
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