Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 22 November 1944 — Page 5
T BY
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LYDIA E. PINKHAM'S {Ecrieus
‘| SAW LUALLEN | IN HOTEL LOBBY’
‘Drifted Around,’ Claypool | Employee Says of Confessed WAC Killer.
(Continued From Page One)
tween 4 p. m. an Aug. 28, 1943, and 8:20 p. m. when Cpl. Ridings’ body was found in Room-729. They know that he worked at a North side bakery until 4 p* m. the day of the murder, They revealed today that Luallen's ex-wife has made the statement that on the morning following the murder she dressed her husband's bleeding thumb which he claimed at that time had been cut in a tavern fight. In his confession to the murder, Luallen stated that he had struck Cpl. Ridings with a bottle and that the thumb had been cut by flying glass. He has told so many fanciful stories and subsequently repudiated them, that police have accepted all details of his second and “final” confession with reserve.
Claim Sufficient Evidence
However, both a city detective and | a deputy sheriff working on the case| claimed today that enough evidence had been accumulated to convict Luallen. “We've got the goods on him,” one of the investigators said. | The weakest point up to date in the investigation of Luallen’s confession was the fact that no evidence directly linking him to the Claypool had been discovered, Police feel that the new eye-wit-ness account may bridge that gap.
AF. L WILL BATTLE CLOSED SHOP STATES
(Continued From Page One)
when the much-anticipated fall of Germany occurs.” Criticizing states which legislate resident workers out of unemployment insurance and other benefits when they take out-of-state jobs at the government's request, McNutt said, “I say that is fumbling the ball on the 10-yard line.” McNutt said that “our generals want trucks, foundries and manpower, yet in some communities the color line is allowed to take precedence over the all-American line in time of war. In other communities, where foundries need manpower, there is inadequate housing for nonAmericans, non-whites and other minority groups. “What is the answer? . . . it is revitalized sense of responsibility to the American people, including the American fighting men. The team of management, labor and government must assume this responsibility, one that will cut across all sectional, regional, industrial, class and race lines.” Gen. Dwight D. Eisenhower, who called yesterday for greater effort in supplying the weapons for shortening the war, praised labor's contribution to the fight in a letter to the convention, President Roose-
velt wrote similar praise.
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Hillman Honored Af C.1.O. Session
(Continued From Page One)
in local, state and national elections in 1946.” The convention, after a fervent plea from Mr. Murray, reaffirmed the C. I. O. no-strike pledge for duration of the war. There was no
in nearby Gary, Ind, where the largest steel mill in the world was tied up. Vice President Herry Wallace made a stirring speech urging the C. I. O. forces on to bigger political activity—much as Mrs, Eleanor Roosevelt did on the preceding day. Mr. Wallace outlined a program in behalf of “the common man” which put it up to Mr. Roosevelt on the question of going right or left during the next four years, Nowhere in his speech did Mr. Wallace mention that the conservative part of the Democratic party had ditched him for Senator Harry Truman of Missouri. The convention enjoyed the speech of Mr, Wallace, and so did Mr, Wallace. He had a number of uncomplimentary phrases for Republicans and “reactionaries,” and he got a good laugh out of them even before the delegates responded. There were cries of “We want Wallace” and “1948"—indicating the present C. I, O. predilection toward a presidential candidate four years from now.
STATE GOP TALKS "STREAMLINED" RULE
(Continued From Page One)
automatically become cabinet members, has not yet been decided, it was said. While the politicos were mulling over the effects of a possible “sweeping” reorganization program, they likewise were polishing the party broom for another sweeping movement. This one would sweep Democrats (and a few Republicans) right out of the state jobs they'™s now holding. G. O. P, leaders thought it would be nice if Democrats were gracious enough to walk out voluntarily before the down-stroke of the broom. Hobart Creighton (R. Warsaw), speaker. of the house, who is expected to be renamed for the 1945 assembly, said he hoped that holdover appointees of Governor Schricker’s administration would submit their resignations when Mr. Gates takes office Jan. 8. This was about as far as Mr. Creighton would go, but Republican state headquarters observers tand they'll observe at the ‘drop of a hat), supposed that Mr. Creighton’s remarks might apply to the few Republicans named to state jobs by Governor Schricker also. These Democratic-appointed Republicans, it was indicated, aren't quite as warm toward the G. O. P. state organization as they might be. As Republican vote-primers from throughout the state sparred for the fruits of victory—namely jobs— State Chairman John H. Lauer stablized the situation by declaring that all patronage will be dispensed through the state committee. Reports were current that previous plans to establish a threemember patronage committee were in the nature of a “trial balloon” that was unceremoniously punctured by realistic politicos who preferred to work right straight through the party's regular organization set-up.
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WITH 6TH ARMORED DI- | VISION NEAR GROS TENQUIN, | Nov. 21 (Delayed) (U. P.).—Maj.
reference to a current wildcat strike|
PHONE WORKERS DEFY WLB EDICT
Back to Work Demand Voted Down in Ohio Strike.
(Continued From Page One)
dent of the federation, told the board: : “It is our understanding that this board was created to. facilitate settlement of disputes and not to lock the doors and we feel that in our case the doors have been locked. “Because this is so, the officers of this union will not recommend to any girl that she should go back” to work. The strike, . which has crippled communications to and from 28 Ohio cities, was called by the National Federation of Telephone workers to protest the payment of an $18.25 weekly cost-of-living bonus to out-of-town operators brought into the Dayton, O., exchange. Pollock told the WLB yesterday that the union had refused to end the strike because no leader “could conscientiously order a girl making $21 a week to work beside a girl making $39.25 a week for exactly the same work.” The Ohio Bell Telephone Co, Pollock said, “could end the strike in a minute” by publicly anpouncing that it would immediately remove imported operators who are paid extra maintenance wages in addition to their weekly wage: Estimates of the total number of telephone employees on strike in Ohio ranged from 3000 to 8000. Some 500 long line workers of the American Telephone and Telegraph Co. in Cleveland, who handle radio network and news wire connections, joined the strike last night by refusing to cross picket lines. Telephone industry officials admitted there was danger the strike might disrupt operations of radio networks and news wire service as well as long-distance lines. With its operators out on strike, the Ohio Bell Telephone Co. restricted- long-distance service to emergency and war-essential calls only.” Others were turned down or discouraged because of delays which sometimes amounted to 24 hours.
AGE INVESTIGATOR JOINS VOTING PROBE
Newest addition to the fast-grow- | ing investigative staff sifting election fraud charges here is George Shillito, seasoned U. S. senate investigator who spearheaded the 1939-40 WPA fraud probe in Indi-
ana, Mr. Shillito has temporarily replaced Harold Buckles as chief of the staff assigned to the state by the senate campaign expenditures committee. Mr. Buckles returned to Washington where he was expected to urge Senator Theodore °F. Green (D. R. 1.), chairman of the campaign expenditures committee, to authorize a formal airing of alleged electidbn iregularities in Marjon county and Indiana. Mr, Shillito said he would continue to maintain investigation headquarters at Room 537 of the Claypool hotel, although he also intends to compile research in the Federal building office of U. 8. Dis~ trict Attorney B. Howard Caughran.
THANKSGIVING IN ROME ROME, Nov. 22 (U., P.).—Ameri-
| Gen. Robert W. Grow of Washing‘ton, D." C., commander of the 6th | armored division, yesterday nar- | rowly escaped death or injury when a shell exploded over his head.
can soldiers of all faiths will at- | tend special services tomorrow to {commemorate the first Thanksgiv|ing observed here since the Italian capital was liberated.
Machinist Uses
(Continued From Page One)
doin’ what I could to help,” he explained. . ” » o MR. MARCILLIAT started “doin’ ‘what he could” when the first portents of the impending conflict started the issuance of | defense bonds in 1939. | After Pearl Harbor his buying | increased, and then a few months ago his war bond allotment was increased again when his son, | William E. Marcilliat, left his job at Allison to enter the navy. To | date, his interest in America to- | tals about $18,000. | “Appears to me anyone with a son in would want to buy,” he said, explaining his increased
Money to Speed Nazi Defeat
Liberty Bonds
bond allotment. “Looks like they'd see it as a way to get their boys back quicker.” 5 » ” MR. MARCILLIAT doesn’t figure there's any doubt about whether or not bonds are a good investment. He points out that he was able to buy a home and save from his Liberty bond purchases. Then when this war came along he sold some of the holdings which h& had bought from his world war I bonds and gained the profit which has enabled him to turn his war plant salary into financial ammunition. He hasn't figured out - quite
what he will do with the war bonds that are accumulating now. ” » ”
“I'M GOING to put all my salary in for the. rest of this year,” he said, “and keep on buying as long as the government needs money.” His post-war plans for spending of the bond money haven't been worked out yet, either. “I figure maybe I might retire,” said the man who has worked 15 years at Allison's and at the NordykeMarmon plant in world war I
ANAPOLIS TIMES 7th Army Breaks Through . Defenses of Upper Rhineland |N
(Continued From Page One)
I
On the Cologne front the
and engineers into the line as infantrymen today in an attempt to halt Lt. Gen. Courtney H. Hodges’ 1st army drive which pushed more than a mile northeast of Heistern, 11 miles east of Aachen. British 2d army forces neared Wurm, four miles northeast of Geilenkirchen and 26 miles southwest of Dusseldorf, and further northwest were within four miles of Venlo in Holland. U. S. 9th army-troops captured Merzenhausen, 25 miles west of Cologne. Trap Threatens Nazis The German retreat through the Saverne gap was becoming panicky with the enemy abandoning weapons and other equipment in his haste to escape the advancing Americans. One 7th army column was more than eight miles east of freshly-liberated Sarrebourg, another 12 miles northeast and a third 11 miles southeast. The speedy 7th army advance threatened to trap thousands of German soldiers caught between its columns and the French 1st army pushing north along the Rhine in the enemy rear.
At the northern end of th
and 9th armies and the British 2d army were sluggi out in a showdown battle inside Germany itself with gains measured in hundreds of yards rather than miles. The situation, army by army, from north to south along the 400-mile allied offensive front was: BRITISH 2D ARMY-—Advanced against light resistance to within six miles northwest and four miles southwest of border fortress of Venlo in southeast Holland ; approached Wurm in Germany, four miles northeast of Geilenkirchen and 26 miles southwest of Dusseldorf. AMERICAN 9TH ARMY-—Captured Mersenhausen, 25 miles west of Cologne and within sight of Roer river along which Germans expected to”make next last-ditch stand; fought into Fronhoven, three miles northeast of Eschweiler; repulsed counter-attack northeast of Geilenkirchen.
AMERICAN 1ST ARMY—Captured Eschweiler, six
miles northeast of Aachen;
one mile northeast of Eschweiler, AMERICAN 3D ARMY-—Repulsed heavy German counter-attack three miles from Merzig in Germany's Saar
basin; liquidated one of last
French spearhead at Rhine;
east of Belfort. An official statement from Maj. Gen. Wade H. Haislip’s 15th corps headquarters on the 7th army front announced that his forces had broken through a segment of the “outer ring” of defenses protecting Germany “within sight of the Rhine.” Though he did not identify the exact locale of the
breakthrough, dispatches said that the 2d French armored division, fighting with the Ameri-
can corps, had driven through Dabo, half way across the snowcapped Vosges and 25 miles west northwest of the great industrial center of Strasbourg on the Rhine. The 44th infantry division under
Maj. Gen. Robert L. Spragins, who
was Patch’'s chief of staff on
Guadalcanal, was keeping pace with an advance of 12 miles or more to the northeast through Siewiller to within 18 miles of the Saar border of Germany,
Other 7th army troops seized
Mittelbrown, - eight miles east of Sarrebourg and gateway to the Saverne pass.
Farther south, Maj. Gen. John W.
O’Daniel's 3d division crossed the Meurthe rivery smashed the German defenses on the east bank between Raon |'Etape and St. Die and advanced another east.
two miles to the
*Other Tth army troops advanced
to within a mile north of St. Die
REPORT NAZIS HANG
(Continued From Page One)
aginst the Nazis and threatening the government if it insisted on continuing the war. Hopelessness and dissatisfaction has reached even the army, particularly because of poor quality and insufficient weapons, food and clothing, the newspaper said. Desertérs were increasing at such a rate that soldiers have been warned that the allies “cut off the arms and legs of every living German soldier captured,” the dispatch said. It estimated that 16,300,000 Germans have been left homeless by allied air raids and said the whole
cost what it may.”
“awaiting the opportune for action,” the newspaper sald.
trol, it went on, but
jost the war.”
Real Relief. Big §
and captured Gen. Kittel, the city commander; advanced into Steinsbesch forest southeast of Metz and eight miles from German border. : ; AMERICAN 7TH ARMY —Reduced first fortresses in Saverne gap on historic Paris-to-Strasbourg road and pressed on within 25 miles or less of Strasbourg; one column within sight of the German border. - FRENCH 1ST ARMY—Clearing Belfort and battled German counter-attack farther south designed to nip off
SEVEN WOMEN, CHILD
country was “yearning for peace,”
Workers and peasants were moment
Gestapo Chief Heinrich Himmler was tightening pressure in an effort to keep the country under conYeven the Nazis admit the third Reich has! Nazi infantry regiment gave up
For Joyful Cough Relief, “Try This H
3d army. All German resistance ended at 8:45 a. m. (Indi-| Superfortresses Destroy a anapolis time), two days after the collapse of all opposition except diehard pockets. The Nazis still were holding out in some of Metz’s outlying forts.
Germans threw artillerymen
e front, the American st, 3d it
advanced through Hehlrath,
two German pockets in Metz
captured Mulhouse, 25 miles
and occupied Clefcy, eight miles south and gateway to the Bonhomme pass through the Vosges. Only light to moderate resistance was being encountered, Swiss dispatches also said a German garrison of 900 was holding out in Huningue, at the southeastern tip of the French-German border and across the Rhine from the Swiss town of Basel, i Sixth army group headquarters! said the American 7th and French 1st armies together had liberated 1503 square miles of eastern France along with 500 towns and villages and countless roadside hamlets in the past week, The 7th army alone has captured 7000 prisoners, In Metz - itself,- Patton’s - men cleared the island of Chambiere just inside the city and one of the last two pockets of enemy resistance, Gen. Kittel, commander of Metz, was found wounded in a hospital on Chambiere;
YANKS DESTROY 42 KING TIGER’ TANKS
(Continued From Page One)
have beaten off every panzer thrust in this area, with the highly maneuverable Shermans sometimes closing to 400 to 800 yards in flanking sweeps around the enemy in
side plates. Lo Tremendous artillery superiority has been a major factor in the bat tle on this front. At one headquarters position I watched while a concentration of 500 German troops was platted on a map, The ‘commanding officer gave an order, and 150 big shells landed simultaneously in the area. The officer rubbed out a circle which had marked the concentra tion on the map.
6000 prisoners since its offensive opened last Thursday, a majority of them herded in from a series of tank encirclements. . On the first day almost an entire
| when our tanks got in behind them.
ome Mixture
19 8-29'S LOST
that they destroyed 20 Japanese fighter planes, with 19 probably destroyed and 22 others damaged.
nese radio assertions that 63 of the huge American bombers had been shot down or damaged against a loss of six Japanese fighters. |B
communique number of B-20's which have been: & announced lost since they went into 3 action last summer.
for attacks on other enemy positions in the Philippines.
Japanese had recalled their supreme commander Shunroku Hata, who only last week was reported directing the enemy's successful campaign against the network of American air bases in southeastern China.
B-29 radis finally had goaded the Japanese fighter reserves in battle came first in a Washington communique announcing that heavy opposition was encountered in yesterday's attack on the Omura aircraft factory on Kyushu.
swarmed up to challenge the giant raiders, touching off the first major air battle over the Japanese homeland since the start of the war.
tresses were involved in the three raids, claiming 18 definitely destroyed, 12 probables and 33 damaged, most of them over Kyushu,
day, Sunday and Monday continued their steady pounding of Japan's outlying bases in the Philippines, Borneo, the Palaus, Marshall islands - and in the Bonin and Volcano islands.
island, the crack Japanese 1st division, breaking the American ring around remnants of a pocketed regiment two miles below Limon, began digging in on a new defense line south of the Leyte river, Bad weather continued to hamper| the American advance from the south on Ormoc, 20 miles south of Limon, although some progress was
Nimitz announced at Pearl Harbor
destroyed.
‘| cided to form a wholly government~
order to get in shots at the thinner|
The 9th army has taken, nearly.
‘HUGE BATTLE
Least 20 Jap Fighters During Raid.
(Continued From Page One)
secondary targets of Nanking and '% Shanghai. in yesterday's raid.
The returning planes reported §
The communique deflated Japa~
The losses announced in today's brought to
At the same time,
were using the
From Tokyo came word that the
in China, Marshal
Flush Jap Fighters News that the increasingly heavy
into risking their thin
Scores of Japanese fighters
Tokyo said 70 to 80 Superfor-
Raids Continue Other American warplanes Satur-
In the land fighting on Leyte
apparently despairing of
reported in today’s communique. Meanwhiie, Adm. Chester W. that 63,338 Japanese were killed and 3267 captured during the last month in fighting on the Marianas and Palau islands. All organized resistance on the islands ended long ago, but isolated enemy pockets still were being hunted down and
.Tokyo advanced no explanation for the recall of Marshal Hata from China, or the accompanying shift of nine other generals to “desk jobs” in the army military schools and military police organizations. Hata, who was named inspectorgeneral of military education, was
Okamura.
AUSTRALIA TAKES AIRLINES
CANBERRA, Nov, 22 (U, P), — The Australian government has de-
owned statutory authority to take over.and operate all interstate airlines, Deputy Prime Minister F, M.
19 , the |f
American ground forces were reported wiping out the last survivors of a trapped Japanese regiment near the west . coast of Leyte, and Gen. Douglas MacArthur announced that U, S. heavy bombers island's airfields as staging bases
odor"
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replaced in China by Gen. Yasuji',
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the
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