Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 11 September 1944 — Page 5

| Yank re Luxembourg:

5

YS . ’ 4 : - RAPS NEW DEAL Service Story Goes to the Dogs ; » fis ; hE E71 8B British Smash Into Holland | INFLATION FEAR ‘a { 4 BY (Continued From Page One) |“mystery offensive” aimed at the. : ed Y i “ Rhineland. : : g Firm I Sty Should dad io enemy hands,” | “poqces troops in Luxembourg| ® «2 Landis Charges Democrats i3e the dispatch said. were only an hour’s forced march pe y= Fever symptoms uled § American Long Toms and other from the German towns of Trier Grab Off’ Large . they have so much oonfienes | i artillery were reported shelling (Treves) and Saarburg at nightfall 2. a XH Wy an 2 ho ay. | German soil from a dozen frontier yesterday. Farther to the north, Salaries. write for it. Use If accord! ng outposts after the capture of Lux-|other 1st army columns were barely : : directions on label and after you avid Alex- ‘ embour — the third allied capitali2s miles from the Reich in the * (Continued From Page One) are completely satisfied, pay only r of the liberated since D-day—and a sweep | Ardennes forest area: eight miles $125. If not permit the Republican amendment not satisfleq, Sou ue 1 be at 9 | toward the border 10 miles beyond. (east of Marche. Still another force Fh nothing but a report. Send your . Peter & § The army newspaper Stars and|i5 miles to the south was reported to pass which provided that the name and address today, stating by burial F Stripes sald in Paris that the first|east of St. Hubert. underpaid workers of America could which symptoms you have. * shells fell at Bilichen, & little less| The city of Luxembourg, situated bargain with their employers up to vO s 77, died than a mile ‘across German on a high, rocky plateau, formerly . 1 the Spink i frontier, after a 1st army advance was one of the strongest bastions $37.50 per week withous consulting Hemorrhoids—Get 4 ess of sev- to the area of Limbourg, 13 miles|in western Europe, but had been| % the war labor board in Washing- 5 lief N : east of Liege and 8% from the gemilitarized since late in the 15th ton.” e ow ¢ he had border. - |century. When the Germans over- “They claimed it would create in- Millions of sufferers in the last 40 Mr. Chomel Ludwig - Sertorius, Berlin radioiran the Duchy in 1940 they found fiation.” years Jove ound 2 Y way get quick company commentator, said American forces it defended by an army of 300 relief from ng and smarting ortly after “met stubborn German resistance | men—most of them members of the Non ah A g 5 Raises granted by the administra- of piles. They use a delightful cool- = active as at Maastricht,” Dutch fortress city army band. tion and cited by Mr. Landis in- : ing, soothing and astringent for- : - This map shows how the Americans have liberated Luxembourg’s . : Lt. Betty Kimmel and Siegie { mula — Peterson’s Ointment No me ill near Aachen, indicating that Hol- cluded: Fred M. Vinson, director y eg vivors land had been penetrated in that Secrecy Covers Patton capital and have moved up on a 200-mile front to shell the Siegfried |: : | wonder one sufferer writes, “The th vivo shen Headquarters withheld all infor-| line at several points. The British have taken Zeebrugge in clearing of the office of economist stabilia- There have been a host of months overseas as a sentry dog itching and smarting were relieved, Nie el. both Tightly-censored front dispatches q | the approaches to Antwerp, and have captured Hasselt in moving |tion who turned down the 8 cent an| stories about brothers or friends and joined his mistress here re- jand 1 Slept all night, Peterson's Tagen indicated that the climactis satlt mation on the progress of Patton’s| closer to The Netherlands border. Open arrows indicate Nazi coun- hour increase for railroad men, re-| going into service at the same cently. |e ee oe, to, oo 's West Wall had been attack, but it was indicated that| terthrusts at the Moselle river line. ceived a $2500 boost bringing his time and meeting again after a A three-week habilitation course | plic: Sus Money back if not delighted. AN on er's Ta the flery 3d army leader had ; to $15.000 | long separation, but here's one so restored his original disposition mounted along a front of more brought up his armored and artil- salary $15,000 per year, ps ith a new angle. that he became a lapdog. Inas- ; pastod of than 200 ‘miles stretching down lery reinforcements and had thrown $628.32 overtime bonus (his Ov..-| A year ago last Janusy Betty much as Siege weighs 73 pounds, ‘Madam, does an 0 d Methodist from the flooded plains of north- his full striking power into th time pay alone is more than thé| Kimmel of Los Angeles turned = Lt. Kimmel is discouraging this. TABOO t : services for ern Belgium, through the rugged base pay of a serviceman” Mr.| her pet Doberman Pinscher over The lieutenans, who has been prevent your at 3 p.m. Ardennes forest and down into the battle of the Moselle. : u ; . ers central Lorraine basin before Metz and | Dive-bombing allied planes raked | Landis pointed out.) fous Scat guard and enlisted in a he Feeling sais knowing this help? in Crown Nancy. : ES Ta aie is Val L Bowles Salary The big dog, who was almost ford General “hospital in . West EE : Armored columns of Gen Hodges “long Toms” of the Amer Chester Bowles, who received| classified 4-F because of his Virginia and at Ft. Oglethorpe, | In less enlightened days, women » died in army liberated Luxembourg yegter- armies hurled salvo after salvo $6500 as OPA head in Connecticut,| friendly disposition, spent 20 Ga. { didn’t discuss these things. Now, it's ; ome was afternoon - ? q ne as oy Th a med fra |across the frontier from forward, received a $12,000 salary and $682.32 different. If a woman suffess from tral A yon 8 Hny § “ap positions just behind charging eng overtime pay upon being promoted |attack, the Australian government | periodic cramp-like pain and other en ve= against steadily increasing oppo- and tr to head OPA in Washington. CLAIMS SHORT A KS |advised the American government purely functional distresses, she. n 50 years. sition. Tops. Chairman Robert E. Hannegan of ie hters, Mrs. Swirling Tank Battle American and British gunners at| the Democratic Tational committee that a Japanese carrier task force 'ries to learn how to help herself. Zagianaps One column drove 10 miles north ine in Belgium also were pouting | got $10,000 safary and $628.32 over- CONGRESS HEARING had been sighted by Australian] Thousands of women praise the of Eugene, it re pounding | time as collector of internal rev- reconnaissance headed toward Pearl|2-Way help of Cardul. Taken as a of the city to Mersch whers it/German soil from emplacements (Continued From Page One) Harbor; that this government was tonic, it usually peps up the appelocked in a swirling battle with barely six miles from the Reich. ! enue. “n dh od . notified 48 hours pe the attack Jism stimulates the flow of gastric R 1 German tanks and infantrymen,| The barrage raked and tore at |; 4 ar Sl} S058 he von) BY ured hours after the Japanese attack |inat the enemy force was still |juices, thus aiding digestion and neld at 10 while other spearheads stabbed out |Nazi rear guards falling back across | a ae nting inflation |tN8% the United States government headed toward Hawa, and that he|EIOLY ILIAIG uid UD eneety ol to ti vk toward he War foie foe Sh dR enymers Bens mich a "mop | EDoIed 8 Japanese imam ot same noheaion was sem 4 howe Sf, ESLARGS Start ihre da , who died and southeast toward the Moselle form . na er | 5 to be” Mr, Landis 1:30 p. m., Dec. 7. before Pearl Harbor.” ted, 1t Sho L n as di siver. short of Germany, and front dis- | professes : ! oom-| rhe message was sent by com-| “None of this information was, jos i shetly help relieve sd; patches said the British 2d mented. . # To S. purely functional,” periodie pain, as 83, was os Seman oe Bgutine a Ni ol he Americans |. “The CIO labor leaders supported | Dercial i Insts) of the usual | am informed, given to Gen. Short,”| “Try CARDUL .A 62-year record s, - residing army were conv on the Ger- | the legislation which leave these more rap ect military means, Harness said. says it may help! after which Wall in the Diack cepialoty that 8 man city of Aachen. {bureaucrats $628.32 per year over- Harness said, and was received nd in Oak- breakthrough at this point would de : ; x - about 11:30 a. m. at Honolulu, w of James . spill invaders into their homeland, a a een The Russians’ have captired the Bulgarian port of Burgas and HEE Py le onlinved. of P.| A4WHere ddditional time was needed n 1913. battled for every yard, but head-| =~ Liege to the Eupen area, and | Ar¢ mear the Greek Border. Marshal Tito has announced that his |» o Benham Baldwin, didn’t seem | ©, decode it. daughters, quarters sald Hodges’ victory- a United Press dispatch from. that partisans have taken Zajecar, 52 miles from. the Russians at Turnu- ig WORT much about holding the “General Short believes that if ndianapolis,’ flushed men were pushing ahead |... ..i4 fast-moving artillery. | Severin. Other partisans, supposed to be five miles from Belgrade, line coo he was FSA administra- |i message had been telephoned , Piedmont, everywhere, men had started shelling Aachen. | May advance toward the Soviets. tor. He took $10,000 salary and him at 1:30 a. m, he would have of Indian- . ‘The 1st army drive threatened | irer 1st army troops fanned out $682.32 overtime and was on the doen suiclently alerted by that inn and two momentarily to roll over the flank |nore than 21 miles above Liege to . federal and P. A. C. payrolls at ormation and would have been of he strong German tors de- take Hasel, inking w win ne | ROOS@VEIF, Churchill Meet the same time. giuch sever Sroseres wih She 1, TI fending the Moselle river crossings |right flank of British forces driving ! tack occurred,” Harness said. In the Metz-Nancy area, where Lt. |across the Albert canal toward the : . Byrnes Also Listed #larness also said there appeared, Gen. George 8, Patton's U. 8. 3d Dutch frontier. F C f . ; 5 “While fearful that the coal|!0 be “abundance of evidence” that army already had launched a . or on er ence / n u e €C ners raise in wages would create |12 hours before the e Pear) Harbor Now Many Wear : : inflation, Chairman William H. Day == Sispatelics ni ue Bru (Continued From Page One) turn said that he, himself, had |ypis of the war labor board took ( yavely De® ET broke across the canal and rac lost some color recently. his $10,000 salary, plus $628.32 over- Aas ains fashion? F ALSE TE H on past the Escaut canal, almost 20 | head of schedule, and he remained | Canadian Prime Minister W. L.| time. TY, P aid raved 5 TERM With More Comfort miles farther east, to a point within | aboard his private car until Church- “OWM Director James P. Byrnes, | 23¢ Nome Trial Relieves Excess E 1% miles of the Du {Mackenzie King and the Earl of} y in 5 Minutes or DOUBLE MONEY BACK t alkaline (non-|1'3 miles of the Dutch border. ill arrived more than an hour later. | {who was sidetracked for the vice|,, A British armored column dgove | Athlone, governor general of Can-| you still suffer from suffocating gas Churchill walked across four rail- | presidency at the Democratic na- and heartburn dus to excess acid, chances fay and seized bia usk Yester- | ad tracks to where the President *d% Welcomed Mr. Roosevelt and tional convention by Sidney Hill-| us, ours hia 2c GRUe.oT- TAD Ba Ja and selaey » bilge Senin hg waited for him in a large open tour- | urchill. man and his P. A.C. saigiliies, has Se wo en or 3 minutes e Ts mi 8 Surprises au ig Set a it or The top U. S. military men here had considerable to say about in- |, "oll, 50 “AOL RYT SOW, how vou Engraved & Diamond wi Ronald Clark = re sar " included Gen. George C. Marshall, | Ja80D. bub is ontant % pt hit acd v" and oa Ta gas eae om Set Wedding Rings YespOnsent 34 the British Teporied. “Well, hello,” the President greet- ($15,000 salary plus $628.32 overtime. | J J0CF tan 3 fast-working in- ~ Exquisitely designed $ 95 : orthwest ed the prime minister, “I'm glad to army chief of staff; Adm..Ernest J.| “The base pay of our service men |gredients. Udga heips relieve in misutes. in choice of yellow 1 thousands of cornered Nazis/see you.” King, commander-in-chief of the {Who are winning the war is actually | he", “ox, over, 290 million have been god, ‘white gold and 29 2 ON THE CIRCLE broke from the North sea ports in Leaders’ Wives Present U. 8. fleet, and Gen. H. H. Arnold, {lower than the overtime pay of the|stomach, indigestion, platinum. “te '$150 Doors from Towers Light Co. panicky Miempe to Sacape actors es army air forces chief, Gen. Brehon | bureaucrats. ache, due do aoe aed, al your drug- . Bchel ver estuary Zee-| “Eleanor's here,” the President

3 . coagulated wax (cerumen), try the Ourine

land, only to be slaughtered by lowfiying R. A F. rocket-firing planes. British armored patrols were disclosed to have rounded up more CAUSE than 12000 fleeing Germans in that area last Thursday, Friday and ; | Saturday. More than 2500 Nazis were taken by the American Ist th | Army in the drive through Belgium and Luxembourg, and the two bags {raised German losses since D-day! to some 600,000 men killed, wounded or captured.

Cling to Ports

Meanwhile, the battle of the channel ports continued unabated as die-hard garrisons held cn grimly under a torrent of bombs and shells to delay their use by the al-

Simple Test Aids Thousands Who Are Hard of Hearing

Thanks to an easy no-risk hearing test, Wany thousands who have been through the outer works of Le a Havre against a fanatical band of Nazis who took an unprecedented blasting from warplanes yesterday. : The bombardment was climaxed in the evening when a great fleet of R. A. F. heavies dropped more than 5000 tons of bombs, probably the biggest aerial blow in history. Equally bitter fighting continued around the besieged Breton port of

you are bothered by rim

Buzzing head noises dus to hard or

To relieve distress of Periodic

th 4 t. i naval aides, lies to the last Decaiie Moment. 4] Watson and Rear Adm. Wilson

added, referring to his wife who was caught in a swarm of photographers near the automobile, Mrs. Churchill, who was with the | Prime Minister, was caught in an{other crowd on the opposite side of { the car, but spied Mrs. Roosevelt and shouted, “Hello there.” “Did you have a nice trip” the | President asked Churchill, who replied by telling him that although there were three days of “beautiful weather,” he was “frightfully sick” part of the time. Traveling with the President were Adm, William D. Leahy, his chief of staff; Vice Adm. Ross T. Mclntire, his physician and surgeon general of the navy; and his military and Maj. Gen. Edwin M.

Brown.

Top Staffs Ready

The President was preceded here by the top American military chiefs and extensive staffs. Similar top British staffs came from London and Washington for the important talks—which are expected to cover a wide field, but with emphasis on allied post-surrender plans for Germany and a speedier victory over

B. Somervell, chief of the army serv- | - ices, was here as an assistant to Marshall, The party also included a large staff of subordinate war ex-| perts of the army, navy and air forces. The sunshine of a bright autumn morning bathed the river and the Citadel as the President and prime minister drove in the open automobiles under close escort to the Citadel.

JUDGE COX TO SPEAK

A watermelon feast will be spen- | sored by the Warren township | Democratic club tomorrow evening | at the home of Paul E. Cannaday, | 6100 E. 16th.st. Judge Earl R. Cox will be guest speaker. v

| HONOR BLUESTEIN Abe Bluestein, national director of the League for Human Rights of the American Federation of Labor, will be guest of honor at a buffet in the Athenaeum tomorrow night under | the auspices of the local committee | of the league.

VETERAN AUXILIARY MEETS A pillow slip card party at 1:20}

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Brest, where American troops made slight gains yesterday under cover| “What a mob scene fit is” of a shattering naval barrage from Churchill remarked as his converthe 15-inch guns of the British sation with the President at the battleship Warspite and the monitor station was drowned out by the Erebus. shouts of 50 or more photographers Observers along the British chan- who wanted the two leaders to nel coast reported great naval ac-|take different poses, tivity off the French shore last! Mr. Roosevelt confessed — to night and the Berlin radio said {Churchill that he'd lost a little allied forces had been repulsed in|Weight, and the Prime Minister in

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Japan. p. m, tomorrow at the Food Craft] shop will be sponsored by Hoosier auxiliary No. 624, Veterans of

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“MIND READING” IS TOPIC

James McLemore, Indianapolis at- | torney, will speak on “Mind Read- | ing” at the Gyro club luncheon at noon tomorrow in the Indianapolis | Athletic club.

Le Havre. There was no confirmation. The battered Luftwaffe again made no attempt to interfere with the mass slaughter of its ground r | forces by allied airmen yesterday, se and the U. 8. 8th air force reported ucus, | that American fighters on a sweep of Western Germany yesterday destroyed 119 grounded planes and shot down six of the handful that rose to challenge them.

The Bill of Rights reserves to the people all rights not absolutely essential to the preservation of the Union and the common defense. By the power of the secret ballot, we, the common people, are the rulers of our Government. W. mend the Constitution itself ~— without recourse to" war or revolution. These are our rights — not privileges granted by dictators or dynasties. Today these rights are attacked by dictators and dynasties. Our armed forces are defending them with their blood. The least we can do is ta

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