Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 19 January 1945 — Page 6

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Gets 'King Size’

7s Fly Low to Raid® K{ Akashi Aircraft Factory | On Honshu Island. (Continued From Page One)

RES

Kobe-—bombed the target in almost perfect weather,

Returning pilots said large explo- | ctons and fires were seen and that the Superforts bombed from a considerably lower altitude than usual

THE IN DIANAPOLIS TIMES

Battle Souvenirs

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3 STRIKES AT

GERMAN HINGE

Nazis Overrun 3 Towns in Growing Threat to

Strasbourg. (Continued From Page One)

Diekirch, leaving mopping-up parties to deal with remnants of the Nazi garrison, They slashed across the Sure river and rolled the Germans up against the Our river which is the 'Luxembourg-German horder at that

(Continued From Page One)

when he arrives at ‘Union Station from New York. Chairman Brownell has announced that the aims of the com-

ference will be toward a general co-ordination of all state opganizations with the national committee for the 1946 and 1948 campaigns.-4 Indian party leaders see in this a chance to become a blue ribbon link in the national campaign chain and they're all set to take advantage of it, Hoosier party chieftains feel that

Je factory—only 10 miles west of 4 | from an upwind direction. Pilots reported that fighter opposition was slight to medium with flak “slight to moderate,” indicat- ) is that the Japanese may have been as surprised by the attack on this new target as they were by the first Superfort raid on Tokyo. Early reports indicated no.B-29s/ - were lost on the raid.

New Jap Plant

The Kawasaki plant is one of the | most modern of Japan's plants, Pictures taken yesterday by a B-29 reconnaissance showed a<huge air-

] field adjacent to the plant, leading

to the belief that the planes were assembled completely and flown | away from the factory to war fronts. | ! While today’s strike was going on| Brig. Gen. Haywood 8S. Hansell, | commander of the 21st bomber command, was awarded a distinguished service medal. The citation J that “his recommendation was a material factor in the final decision made by higher authority to seize the Marianas islands.”

Proud possessor of one of the few “king size” war souvenirs is Mrs. Orville Cheatham, 724 Park ave. It was sént to her by her husband, 1st Sgt. Orville Cheatham, a veteran of 14 years of service, now serving as a radio instructor somewhere in France. The 18-foot flag, one of the largest yet reported, is of the traditional red color with the German insignia prominently displayed.

Russians Capture Krakow,

~~ Tomorrow! Norwegian Blue-Dyed Fox

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Was $189..

Tomorrow!

Sable-Dyed Squirrel

The besuty of sable 808t of quality.

Was $375....... Now

Tomorrow!

(Qrey-Dyed Bombay Lamb

sctical fur that's ever popular styled for the future,

Was $289.......Now

: Tomorrow! Beaver-Dyed Mouton Lamb

Basing. ke Suppit ) loveliness in a fur

$ tha many times the

Was 8180.......Now

I

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28

Open 4th Assault in Poland

(Continued From Page One) | the historic Masurian lakes southern East Prussia, saying that | into German Silesia. ying

fighting flared to the east of them. | At least one spearhead was re-|

: tack Russian breakthrough attempts | ported heading for Oppelu, 23 miles | pot \ween Rominten Heath and Guminside Germany,

50 miles south-|pinnen fajled, the Berlin com-| east of Breslau, and 52 miles west | |munique reported.

of Polish Czestochowa. Thousands of refugees fleeing the | pect Soviet advance were said to be|iya Danube. crowding ’into Breslau and er The Germans said that cities of industrial Silesia, detaching movements

1st Ukrainian army had plunged

“our |

Marshal * Konstantin K: Rokos-

to plan.”

had reached the southern border

y {of East Prussia, putting that 4 «| German province under storm from | 3 : the south and the east. ; Red Airmen Active . : The Red air force was reported |

territory northwest of Czestochowa. | The Polish embassy in Moscow |

swift -Soviet-advance west of War-|

to have swarmed, into the offensive! { 20.000 Polish civilians interned in in perhaps its greatest force of- the la concentration camp. war. A Moscow dispatch said the | Russians flew 30,000 sorties in three) | days. Taking advantage of improving | weather, the Russians were reported giving close support to the ground forces in ceaseless assaults. The German high command said the fast-shifting battle line through | : Poland now ran through the re-|: ’ gions of Krakow, Czestochowa, Lodz, | in ; Kutno, Plonsk, Mlawa, Kransnosielc | ; and Ostroleka. ! The Berlin communique conceded | ; the storming of Krakow and Lodz. | “Grim fighting”. was reported to! ; be raging in the streets of both | | cities—a wording which often re-| flects a Nazi view that a point under | assault cannot be held much longer. | For the first time since the Russians attacked in the eastern bor-| der area of East Prussia in an offen- | sive still unconfirmed by Moscow, | the Nazis made it evident that the | Red army was making - . progress there,

| : Acknowledge Losses These prices are silly—these fur gp... acknowledged ‘8 Russian coats are marked so low that many | penetration to the area of Breitenthrifty women will remember this| stein, 17 miles northwest of Schloss- | January Sale for a long, long time! | berg (Pilkallen), the loss of which All prices are plus 20% Federal [the Germans conceded several] days |

Tax. ago.

ASSEMBLY MINORITY +148

Tomorrow! Northern Back Muskrat

A durable fur of precious rat § styled for the future.

Was $219..

PRESSES VOTE PROBE

| | (Continued From Page One) | or

who formulated and carried out a! gigantic criminal conspiracy by which more than 10,000 Democratic and independent voters were denied the franchise at the last election.” A bill was introduced in the house today to appropriate $2,500,000 from the state’s general fund to erect three new buildings as ad-| ™ ditions to the American Legion na|tional headquarters - on the ‘war memorial plaza.

State Levy Provided

‘The measure also provides that the state levy & property tax of one-half cent for the next eight years to raise another $1,700,000 to complete a long-range Legion building program here, Another bill would appropriate | $35,000 annually for agricultural research at Purdue university on the] uses of farm produce for industrial purposes. It would also appropriate | $20,000 for the remainer of 1945, beginning July 1.

Tomorrow!

Black-Dyed Russian Pony

Bleek, black, lustrous, slenderizing fur of great beauty.

Was $219.......Now

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Mink-Dyed Coney

All the beauty of mink expertly blended and fashioned into a coat of luxury.

Was $119..

Tomorrow!

Black-Dyed Kidskin

Buch beauty . . . such a value on today's rising market is truly sensational.

Was $159 ......Now

WIFE SUES COMEDIAN HOLLYWOOD, Jan. 19 (U, P.).— Film Comedian Frank Jenks was named in a divorce suit today by Mrs. Margaret Louise Jenks in which she cHarged extreme cruelty. | DON’T JUST SUFFER COLD {

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LN

| |kirch Patton’s men blasted into the! Nazi border defenses. : TWO AIR CADETS DIE

“Tstalled the U.S. WE army drive, Freeman —fieldatithorities today

point, Some 15 miles southeist of Die-

they should be a bigger factor in

They caputred the border towns of Rosport, four miles east «of Echternach and Wasserbillig, seven| miles farther south. Stiffening German -

IN SEYMOUR CRASH

SEYMOUR, Ind, Jan. 19 (U. P.).

resisiance | however, less than five miles from |annouriced that Army Aviation the enemy's northern anchor at St. Cadet John S. Rush, 20, of Johnson Vith., = Wh & Mi The 1st infantry division, in fact, | City, Tenn, and another unidentilost 200 yards to a strong counter- {fled cadet were killed last night in attack in the Schoppen area 7!: fan A-T-10 training plane crash five miles northeast of St. Vith. |miles west of Seymour. Units of the 30th infantry (rained, The plane of the two Freeman at Camp Atterbury, Ind) drove) field cadets struck a high tension] ahead, however, 1'; miles east of clectric power line but landed in a a captured Recht. {field without burning. They were! They seized positions five miles °® 2 combat training flight. northwest of St. Vith, | Lt. Col. Howard Wiliams, asAnother German counter-blow sistant Freeman field commander,

against the 30th division around Said @ board of -officers has begun Montenau, five miles due north of 2% investigation of the accident. St. Vith, was smothered in a storm | The other cadet's name will be anof shellfire... Heavy enemy casual- | {nounced as soon as relatives can be ties were piled up. |reached, he said. Patton’s new strike against the Rush is survived by his mother,

The Nazi command referred to | salient west of the Roer river in of Holland.

| American tanks and infantrymei! It also acknowledged the loss of | | were clearing the part of Buddpest east cf! | Pockets of resistance in a wooded

3 in eastern] The same source reported that)gigvakia are proceeding according below the town to within a mile of | Aroesti and -Sadelle Cambhi,

|

sovsky's 2d White Russian army | | A Berlin dispatch of the German. | controlled Scandinavian Telegraph north drove across the Dutch border {yards.all along their attack front. (bureau reported fighting in German |into GermaRy in considerable force. German resistance was stiffening

today received a report that the northeast of Sittard.

saw had liberated from 10,000 to|mond-Sittard road at several points

|

Camps and Cottages

THE ALL-METAL BUNK BEDS — 36x76-in size Built sturdily to meet strict Government specifications! Heavy all-metal frames | in brown walnut finish! Heavy Wa offer these beds ' (as such they were sold to us) . . . but after examining a'score we can find nothing that would affect their wear

fast-disappearing Nazi bulge came | MS Bertha Rush of Johnson City.

ne aoseog oY sorces Dunched TALENT SHOW LINKED TO CANTEEN DANCE

A-talent-show-will-be-presented at {the Jump Town teen-canteen dance jioniats at Rhodius community {center Participan ts in the program will be Jean Perry, Marilynn Mattox, German Beverly and Donald Kleis, Barbara Gibbs, Daisy and Belle Eskenazi, Charlotte Levy, Betty Clare Lukenarea northeast of Sterpigny. 5% Evelyn Stillerman, Betty Jo

Other units drove a half-mile anq Barbara Willoughby, Marlene

The British drove eastward on a| i front of more than six miles.

Yanks Clear Pockets At the western end of the salient, |

scattered

Rettigny. British 2d army troops to the painmered out gains of 1000 to 2000

They captured Hongen, two miles hourly, but field dispatches said linside the Reich and three fofies | Avieiony heavy artillery was layng a blistering barrage down in The British -also—cut the Rivet= the path of the attacking Tommies. The Nazi D.N.B. news agency northwest of Hongen. {asserted that three British divisions

FRIDAY, J AN. 19, 1065

Indiana G. O. P. Seeks Top?

satiorel ariy politics since they swung Indiana farther into the Re publican column than any other, state outside of Kansas. Mr. Morris said the meetings will open with a reception -Sunday noon at the Columbia club.

Affairs Scheduled

Committeemen will be entertained #t a luncheon at the club at 1 p: m. and an informal gathering has been arranged for Sunday afternoon at the Claypool hotel. Chairman Brownell will be host

teau room of the Claypool hotel Sunday night. Sessions will resume Monday morning at 8:30 breakfast with national committeemen, state government officials and Republican mem bers of the legislature meeting as guests of Governor Gates, Mr. Mor~ ris and Mrs. Cecil Harden. The major. business conference of the committee will get under way at 10 a; m. Monday and continue all

pool hotel. Robert L. Barton, law firm partner of John W. Bricker, unsuccessful Republican vice presidential nominee, will attend the meeting as an observ er...

BILL WOULD CURB ADOPTION RACKET

(Continued From Page One)

covered in isolated instances only: The proposal, they pointed out, also would rigidly enforce current regulations on private child-care and placement institutions, where flagrant abuses are often obvious, they added. ? The measure would require the state ‘health department to make annual inspections of all institutions licensed for maternity and infant care. Virtually all hospitals would be affected. Provisions of the bill demand that records of all illegitimate births be filed with the state health department. “The surname of the child, if illegitimate, shall be that of the mother,” the legislation specifies. Another clause states that “whenever the mother of an illegitimate child, who is without means, has come to Indiana and remained therein during her confinement born, she and the child shall be taken to her residence in such other state” by. an authorized

By nightfall yesterday they had had been thrown into the drive.

1 0.

: oo —

U. S. GOVERNMENT RELEASE

agent of the state health board.

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at the dinner meeting in the Cha-,

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RIDAY, Wil R MITZ

- e first Bar Friday eveni lis Hebrew © mnized at | ices tonigitt. dward“H. Fra . George E. } ant. His Bar 1 also mark t Torah on . congregation gations over t duced the rea Friday becau 8 are unable lay morning yer books ct ich also will b he, ssisting ushe bert Goldberg hard Solomo rfleld. Rabbis t and Mau ftual director

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