Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 8 September 1944 — Page 11
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T— : : ; TT rrr rm ORILLIA I OLESEN EATON LATER RAL EARRAAAES ARSC ISAS SAR ASAIN ER RARE ALAR N RIALS LORCA AARORINNSARARALEO ALLE AANA LOR ANRARARARSE RAEI AAA AAL ALAA OLA A
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Democrats Are All Set for| ~~» Another Depression, He
Declares. _ (Continued From Page One)
pensation, with veterans he could agree on the need for hospital fa-| cilities, with G. O. P. women he could stress the important role of
women in the campaign. They're Selling Dewey
It was all organized with meticu-| Jous care. Governor Dewey is hun-{. dreds of miles from Philadelphia now, but many of those he met in}
personal.sessions yesterday are selling Thomas E. Dewey today. There isn't much question but
that it will take a lot of selling in}
Pennsylvania between now and November. Mr. Roosevelt carried the
state by 281,000 in 1940, and most
of this margin came from Philadelphia and: Pittsburgh.
In his speech, Mr. Dewey pounced
on Ma). Gen. Lewis B. Hershey's statement that #we can keep people in the army about as cheaply as we could create an agency for them when they are out” He sought to link this with “an administration conceived in defeatism” which is “getting all set for another depression” - As in his Chicago acceptance - speech, he charged that it took a war to solve the unemployment problem after Mr. Roosevelt's program had failed. Without mentioning Herbert Hoover, he acknowledged that the depression was three years old when the Roosevelt administration took over, and contended that “the New Deal kept this country in a continuous state
of depression for seven straight years.”
Mr. Dewey likewise exploited the recent blowup in the war production board, in und
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recriminatons” in Washington bureaus. When he reached a point in -his text referring to WPB Chairman Donald-R:-Nelson's--Ching ‘mission; he interpolated: “And this is not a new experience, Other men have been sent to Chiya,”, . The reference seemed to be to the China trip of Vice President Henry A. Wallace. It drew a gleeful response from the audience. Governor Dewey has no notion of playing to party conservatives who might like to see most of the sotial reforms of recent years jettisoned. Of course, he said, the country needs: security regulations, bank deposit insurance, price sup port for agriculture, unemployment insurance, old. age pensions, and
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WILLKIE HITS @ ‘COWARDICE
Takes Both Dewey and FDR
To Task Over Chicago Platform. (Continued From Page One)
by United Feature Syndicate, Jae,’
“Pd ruther dig. ‘A movin® toxhole attracts th’ nye.
relief when there are not enough jobs, It was notable, too, that in the bailiwicz of Pew and Grundy, those G. 0. P. figures were not in the spotlight of the day's affairs. Governor Dewey stressed the idea that “nothing on earth will make us Secure unless we are strong, unless we are productive and unless we have faith in ourselves.” And again he swung to the tneme of the “tired old men” in Washington which he employed in his Chicago convention address. The crowds which turned out for the Republican nominee varied; they were cnly fair when he drove from the railroad station to the hotel on his arrival yesterday morning, but thousands lined the streets when he visited Independence hall.
all of its essential provisions drafte. in advance of the convention.” Toward the end, Willkie states that “I ani a Republican.” But he writes like an independent who has not yet decided for whom to vote. And he warns that it is the “independent voter—the man who does not vote automatically for any candidate his party may nominate— who has determined most presidential elections in the past generation.” Willkie’s basic charge is that both parties framed platforms designed ‘to “conciliate and win all elements of the "population without offending others within or without the party.” Lacking courage to face the issue of post-war foreign policy, writes Willkie, the platform makers—with knowledge of Mr. Roosevelt and Dewey—"borrowed from the past the timidities, the outworn doctrines and mistakes long since rejected by history.” “At the Republican convention,” Willkie writes, “the conclusions of the platform committee were so closely guarded, except from the leading candidate (Dewey), that even Republican-- governors who were delegates could not get copies of the proposed plank to study,”
Comforts Neither Party
There is not much comfort in his article for Republicans who hoped for an early and enthusiastic. indorsement of Dewey or for those who may have thought Willkie would bolt to support Mr. Roosevelt for a fourth term. But for what it may portend, Willkie says that on the general question of foreign policy, the Democratic plank is better than the Republican plank. He finds the Democratic plank more forthright and concrete on the use of armed
Patton Attacking
(Continued From Page. One) progress on Lt. Gen. George 8S. Patline. :
American 1st army tanks and motorized infantry swept 16 miles
miles from the reich.
Robert Richards reported that Patton’s a was locked in a thundering e of tanks and infantry-
Nancy.
German defenses in the hills over-
ported that the foot soldiers were slugging their way forward under cover of the barrage and slowly pushing back the enemy lines. For the past 48 hours, Richards reported, American armor and heavy artillery have been pouring up the Moselle from the west in an erdless parade to add their weight to the attack. Some American armor already was across the four or more bridgeheads on the Nancy-Metz sector. “The Nazis have learned their lessons about American blitz warfare by thé hardest experience and the Metz and Nancy defenders probably will choose to fall back rather than submit to a helpless encirclement which would see them mercilessly pounded by our constantly mounting concentration of artillery,” Richards reported. “The Americans are facing the stiffest kind of opposition at present, but a definite breakthrough is now believed to be only a matter of time. “The approaches to both - Metz and Nancy are heavily mined and the German line along the river between these two strong points is filled with a hodge-podge of ‘battle
force to maintain the peace.
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groups,” composed of elements of Simultaneously, the broken army units. radio sald thouSands of Serbian 8 semaemnny | Villagers had revolted agains; the
there.
On the 3d army's left flank, Lt. Gen. Courtney H. Hodges sent his men along more than 30 miles of|lst' army tanks racing eastward the Moselle from above Metz to|through the Ardennes forest to cap3 ture Bievre; 15 miles beyond the Giant American field guns hurled | Meuse, and Louette and Pierre, 11 salvo after salvo into the makeshift|miles east of the river. Front dispatches said the Gerlooking the river, and Richards re-|mans were on the run in the Arden-
BULGARIA OVERRUN, SERBIANS REVOLTING
' (Continued From Page One)
broken across the Bulgarian frontier and driven all the way through that country to the Greco-Turkish Russian column was said to be approaching Sofia. . Following their custom when a new campaign is developing, Moscow spokesmen were silent. --They-hinted eautiously,-however, at a massive offensive co-ordinated with Anglo-American attacks on the
border.
IcKin fotz and Nancy as lazis Crack on Moselle River Line Before Reich/w
“One bridgehead has been firmly - - {established six miles west of the heart of Nancy and another several miles below Metz.” :
Take 77,000 Prisoners
down the valley of the Meuse from| Richards reported that- the .3d Huy .to the outskirts of Liege, 25|army’'s bag of prisoners, now up.to 2 T7000 men since Aug. 1, included The right wing of the 1st army{many members of famous Nazi dverran Sedan, where the Germans|fighting divisions recently shifted broke ‘through for their sweep to/from the Russian front, the channel coast in 1940, and There was no sign of any major pushed on into the Ardennes forest.| Nagi counter-attack on the Moselle Opposition was reported relative-|front, Richards said, asserting that ly light on’ the Belgian fronts, but|the. enemy seemed to be fighting United Press War Correspondent{only a large-scale delaying action
Another
Balkans from the west.
Moscow's early morning war bulletin said the Russians cleared a 3000-square-mile area of southern Romania and extended its grip on the Danube river border of Bulgaria to 226 miles, advancing 39 miles west from Suhaia to capture the river town of Corabia, The Nazi D. N. B. news agency claimed the Soviets invaded Bulgaria even before declaring war on that country and had penetrated 26 miles into Greece to the village
of Demotica,
nes sector. Some Yank flying columns were reported probing into the German rear 20 miles or more beyond their main forces in a thrust that threatened to cut across .Lux-
the Nazi divisions on the Moselle. The battle of annihilation against
ern France and Belgium continued at top speed. British ‘troops captured Ypres, famous battle site of the last war, and Roulers, 12 miles to the northeast, and pushed on 10 miles northwest of the latter town to within about 10 miles of Ostend. There were no new reports on
Havre, but a communique said Canadian troops tightened their siege arc around Calais and Bou-
units already were reported fighting in ‘the outskirts of Calais and Boulogne.
Germans and were battling the Nazis at scores of points. American and Russian planes are supplying arms and ammunition, the broadcast said. The main Zagreb-Belgrade and the Skolpje-Belgrade railway. lines were said to have been cut at a number of points, hampering the retreat of German forces Bulgaria and Greece. Meanwhile Moscow communiques reported new Soviet successes at the northern end of the Russian line, where Russian troops knifed deeper into the German defenses above Warsaw, gaining three miles on an ll-mile front along the Narew river. se
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