Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 10 November 1944 — Page 8

iene |

[TLER ABSENCE CAUSE OF RAD?

Leader Is Unheard

From for Many Months. -

(Continued From Page One)

absence of their .fuehrer. But nittedly. it was pure conjecture hether he was dead, insane, ded, or sulking in a fit of despair. A Stockholm dispatch noted that tler had not appeared in public pee June 30, although his name was affixed to the decree calling up ‘all able-bodied Germans for the errilla defense of their homeland. The story cited gossip among travelers from Germany that Hitler was dead, was interned after the July attempt on his life, or had suf- | ‘fered a complete collapse of nerves. A Berlin dispatch to Stockholm pr was quoted as saying that the V-2 | was talked about in Germany “near- | ly as much as Roosevelt's re-election "andthe absence of a Munich speech by Hitler.” Broadcasts regarding the Munich anniversary featured unknown speakers pleading for confidence in final victory, with Hitler apparently forgotten at the scene of the putsch he tried to immortalize,

Robot Rockets Dive on England At 1000 M.P.H.

(Continued From Page One)

than thélr predecessors because they . penetrate deeper before ex-

ploding. Thus there have been fewer cases of death and maiming from scattered glass than was the case with

V-1 Not all of the rockets have even reached A Engldnd, and mniany of those which did fell in open country. Some fell in the sea, Others exploded in mid-air, scattering fragments far and wide. Self-appointed experts have guessed that the missles may have comes as much as 200 miles, probably from Holland. There also was a discussion of mysterious gigantic sites captured by the allies in France as possible typical launching places for the rockets. Prime Minister Churchill backed up the experts in part today when he told commons that some of the launching platforms had been overrun by the allles on Walcheren island in southwest Holland, Londoners have looked to Swedish reports for descriptions of the latest of Germany's “secret weapons.” A photograph in The London Daily Express from Sweden showed the rear half of the rocket. It looked like a big boiler with many perforations. The perforations were jets through which the power generated by burning liquid oxygen and high octane alcohol pass. A series of hollow spikes around the base of the “boiler” apparently .were used to direct the missile.

ER GRATITUDE T0 RETONGA UNBOUNDED, STATES MRS. JEWELL

| Acid Indigestion’ and Other

Distress Had Pulled Her Down Fifteen Pounds Says ‘Well Known Resident. Like

Different Person Now.

were 80 severe that I would almost soream. I was simply a slave to laxatives, My nerves were so badly on edge I could sleep only a few hours each night. I felt like I would give anything to get to feeling’ good again, and I tried many medicines, but nothing seemed to help me a particle. - ‘ “This makes the prompt relief Retonga gave me all the more re markable;, I enjoy three good meals every day now, I sleep fine, and I have already regained five pounds, I don't feel nervous like I did, and elimination also is

a tonic combined with liberal quan

Vitamin B-1. deficiency, constipation, insufficient flow of gastric juices in the stomach, and loss of

0 (appetite. Accept no substitute. Re« igs. may be Stained at gil HockY 1

Stores.

Dependable Drug

size, $1.00,

ad 'V-1, they have less blast effects

titles of Vitamin B-1, and is ine tended to relieve distress due to

V-2 REAL THING

Admits Missiles Landing in “London but*tlaims Damage Not So Great. .

(Continued From Page One)

of Walcheren island, in southwest, Holland 150 miles east of London, Churchill disclosed, but said “we cannot be certain the enemy will not be able to increase the range of the rockets.” . Churchill said the rockets carried the same weight of explosives-—-one ton—as the - small jet-propelied bombs with which the Germans have been bombarding the British since last June 15. Though he did not give the dimensioris .of the rockets, Swedish dispatches have placed them 30 to 50 feet long coms= pared with 25-foot-long Jjet-pro-pelled missiles. The rockets, however, were designed to penetrate rather deeper before exploding, he said.

Explains Damage

“This results in somewhat heav-| fer damage in the immediate vi-| cinity above the crater with rather less extensive blast effect around it,” he explained. “The use of this weapon is another attempt by the enemy to attack the morale of our civilian population in the vain hope that he may somehow by this means stave off the defeat which faces him in the fleld,” Churchill said. “Doubtless, the enemy has hoped by his announcement to induce us to give him Information which he had failed to get otherwise. I am sure the house, the press and the public will refuse to oblige him in this respect.”

Robot Bombs Appear

Laborite Will Thorn asked Churchill if it were possible to find out “where these tropedo bombs start.” “Naturally that is a matter upon which our attention is co trated and should satisfactory intelligence be received, no doubt appropriate measures will be taken,” Churchill sald. Stockholm reports published in London sald V-2's were being fired across "the North sea from bases on an arc stretching through the Netherlands and the fringe of Germany itself, A dispatoh in the London Evening Standard said one base was believed situated at Utrecht, only 20 miles north of the present fighting front in the Netherlands. The bomb was

steel platform not much bigger than a tennis court.

Warn United States

“During actual launching operations,” the Evening Standard said “the ramp is constantly sprayed with jets of icecold water because, as the rocket shoots inte the alr, heat develops which expands the steel frame of the ramp and bends it."

CHURCHILL-SAYS|

. Jon their headlights, the government

pe

sald to be fired vertically from a|

Roosevelt M "(Continued From Page One)

headlights boring into the 9 a. m. gloom, rE — ’ The Presidentharrived by special train from Hyde Park at 8:30 a. m.,, awaited in the station until 9 o'clock before piling into his car,

aver the sky a cloud as blagk as a kitten's ear. The chauffeurs switched

clerks lining the walks snapped up their umbrellas, the police stand. ing every 15 feet buckled their paunchos around their necks, and as soon as President Roosevelt started to talk the rain poured down harder than ever,

Banners Lose Form

‘The bandsmen struggled to protect their drums, the radio experts tried to cover their machinery with their raincoats and hundreds of banners, bearing such slogans as “a united nation for united victory” and “we're united with Roose-~ velt and world peace,” turned into ribbons of wet cardboard.

and emerged just as there spread |-

eR

h LT

m aKes .1 ri to climb the back of a granite lon in the plaza fountain was chased off. : "A federal clerk with a Roosevelt button eight inches across on one lapel and another saying “I told you 80" cheered hoarsely, President Roosevelt was met in.

HE RT CER TA A a Re \ helisb iss demailsmeibaniaiia

mphal Return Trip to White

side the station by his cabinet and such stalwarts of his administration as Secretary of Labor Frances Perkins in her fancy triangular storm proof hat, Secretary of Agri~ culture Claude Wickard, Secretary of Commerce Jesse Jones, Postmaster General Frank Walker, Act~

FEAR MORE DEAD. IN CHALLENGER WRECK

COLFAX, Cal, Nov. 10 (U. P)~ Cofoner Francis E. West said today he feared that the bodies of more victims may be found in one of the telescoped - coaches of the Chal. lenger, Southern Pacific passenger train which cracked up Wednesday morning, killing nine persons and injuring 95. Railroad workers will open up the car, fifth from the engine, after giant cranes have cleared away the wreckage, West sald. The fifth car was the only one in which portions were inaccessible to searchers be

A soaking wet marine who tried

cause of the telescoping, railroad officials said. * @

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¢ Arrival Well Advertised

There was nothing secret about the President's home-coming. Every radio station and newspaper carried the exact time of his arrival plus the exortations of the commissioners urging the voteless citizens of the District of Columbia to turn out behind the steel cables and the cops on either side of Pennsylvania ave. . Washington's weatherman, however, ruined hopes of a crowd of 500,000 when he turned on “the celestial faucets for the wettest day of the fall. It rained so long and so hard that veteran secret service

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House” ouse agents said they were reminded not only of Mr. Roosebelt's recent campaign parade in New York, but also of his original inaugliration in 1933 when almost the entire city

waa on the verge of drowning in ite efforts to see the new President,

SOCIAL HYGIENISTS TO MEET WEDNESDAY

Dr. Harriet Cory of St. Louis will

.|speak at a luncheon meeting of the.

Indianapolis Social #lygiene association Wednesday in the Riley room of the Claypool hotel, Director of the Missouri Hygiene association, Dr. Coty wi discuss the contribution social agen= cies can make in abating conditions responsible for delinquency among teen-age girls, * The meeting, open to the public, is included on the special program the Indiana state conference on so~ cial work to be held at the Claypool Monday through Wednesday, Reservations must be made throu the Indianapolis Social Hygiene as-

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from Ivigtut, Greenland, to obtain the .attention of a bone specialist for a leg she fractured while skiing. The passage for Inga.and her mother, Mrs. Oscar Corp, wife of the manager of a Greenland corylite mine, was arranged by the Danish legation when it became apparent that the child could ‘not obtain proper treatment at home. ° Meanwhile, Dr. Ernest Sachs, prominent brain surgeon, was scheduled to operate today on 1l1e

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at 8t. Louis where the child are rived last night with her mother and two doctors aboard an army bomber from Shreveport, La. Her father, Sgt. Woodrow Richards, is somewhere in the Pacific.

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