Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 23 March 1945 — Page 7
AR RC es THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES _ | PAGE 17
NO APPOINTMENT NeEoED Unconfir med Nazi Repor fore SHOWDOWN FOR vet of Korngsbers. Tip Nazis Ripe for Pushover BUTCHERS TRY
Marshal Konstantin K., Rokos-
KY Puts Monty Across Rhine| BERLIN NEARING zz..." Launched Patton's Rampage BUT GET. LITTLE
(Continued From Page One) head, the Americans rammed down : | 4 Danzig and its twin port (Continued From Page One) Siegfried all along the front from -T0 SHOPPERS ding dhe’ b {th the east bank of the Rhine, crossed {of Svan ; Yi ne caplure oo maa dielion’ Sr.. woirh Ey : : in Maina, swelling the tag of théithe Wied river snd captured Neu- Nazis Report. Russ Maint, y WO: BNC 8 NAN I -south| “pie jumped off March 15 with-| Mostly Luncheon Cuts for HOUSEWIVES and WAR WORKERS | two American armies since the} yied, former anchor of the Nazi de- p . : southwest of Gydnia, and Banschin, | across the Roselle and began eating | .. artillery preparation against A y r ; [start of ‘their joint offensive On!fenees Leutgsdorf, Wollendorf and Attack Near Kuestrin. six miles south of Danzig. up German divisions, ko Cin DeSitiots OF tiers “ Week-End Trade. oi) WAITING | March 14 to more than 100,000 cap-|1rjich also were taken in the ad- In East Prussia, the town of Supposedly a Defensive - Role locking pillboxes, six-foot dragon's < : tives. vance. : (Continued From Page One) Schirten, two miles northeast of ~ Ludwigshafen, 34 miles to the s’ SC "OS the the German bastion of Heiligenbeil, ray lor-die : ; south, was being cleared rapidly wing ot a Zen He. Oc mile | Russians were attacking on either | fell in violent fighting. weré a push-over and exploited his Of Se Ores. i K meat traffic here, he asserted. Most of a few hundred die-hard Naz gn northeast of Neuwied. They Side of Hotzenplotz, a mile inside A | discovery. Germans in Pocket | of this illicit trae is from farmer
troops. took ‘a number: of enemy-held Czechoslovakia and 38 miles south- BOY ‘MESSIAH’ LEADS His role was supposedly to be| Two days later Patton smashed direct to the butcher, without ine p
Patton had disclosed the Germans! teeth and SS troops under a stand-| (Continued From Page One)
Official Information on the north- towns, including Datzeroth, Wald- west of Oppeln. . urely defensive — to pre-occupy as Southward.dacross the Moselle and | spection precautions or any meat ern end of -the Rhine front saldi, ...... 1 2nd Rossbach, five, nine Konev's army was one of three many Germans as possible while the began to mop up. Under the joint POMS.
|only that large-scale skirmishing {reported on the march toward 9th army teamed with the Canadian ® Considered Violators | began yesterday in the Nijmegen and 11 miles northeast of Neuwied.| vio ina along a 200-mile front in| ILY ON ‘MISSION’ y threat from the south and north
y - p : unpreceden nume area, where Berlin spokesmen re- Less Bridgehead Resistance a possible bid to break up Nazi : lot on 2 Shep up of the northern yw. the Germans fled northeast. | Je aid 3 Dp adele unite peatedly have predicted the allies| German resistance was reported | plans for a diehard stand in south- | (Continued From Page One) But Patton Bie his own idea of They ran smack into the 4th Per ng a would make their major bid to|weakening all along the bridgehead |ern Germany or Austria. tora to co out of the country and how best to pre-occupy Germans. 2Rored and reeled back into the spected meat from farms in “the cross the Rhine and knock Ger- front as the enemy pulled back to| Another was driving northwest- | : i country take as many prisoners. as possible pocket, : rear ends of their automobiles. many out of the war. new hill positions to the south and|ward through the broken German 40 Work for him.” On Feb. 22 the 3d a the| II Was a similar tale of disorgani-|* In such cases both farmers and Tension Is High east and behind the Sieg river in|defenses between Lake Balaton and| The board commanded him to re-| = "ot the Saar-Moselle triangl |zation everywhere except along the butchers are considered violators, ! th the Danub thwest. of Budapest. pup o/ angle giecfried strip where the 7th was|he added. ¥ the north, 2 ‘:anube norunwesh 9 pest. | turn, below Trier and began exploring] : In the Saar-Palatinate, barely| Today's Berlin communique said | Had “Visions” ther: sections of the Ger P It lengaging. die-hard Nazis so Pat-| Another meat shortage signpost preliminary bombardment of the 4009 Germans were reported still{the Germans were “fighting On| ariccourt farm neighbo id ‘th pe ln a e German lin€ii,n's four tank divisions could | was seen in indications that the Rhine-Ruhr had reached full cres-| fighting against the merged Ameri- | shortened lines” and blocked break-| =~ Neig hors Se : hs ne ES oEoth rth La Pocket. them. {only thing a lot of butcher shops cendo and that massed allied guns|can 3d and 7th armies. through efforts by strong Russian | 14-year-old leader of the group had th i T > hor 2 No smoother military operations are cutting these days are their were pouring a drumfire barrage | The Germans, sole survivors of|tank and infantry formations. {reported having “visions” just after gi arcs Trier fell. The Mo. [PS been seen in this war than Wit busifiges hours. 2 : across the Rhine all along Mont-|two enemy field armies that held Attacking in Slovakia several members of the family were|ceiie valley lay open to exploitation co-ordinating the methodical| i; he} a ance In Hanepol oy {gomery’s 21st army group front, the entire Saar-Moselle-Rhine tri- {baptized into the Church of Christ northeastward toward the great cyl and the mercurial Patton. ja -day, r a ght m “ Shem: a “Berlin flashes - urgent warning|ngle only 10 days ago, were strug- Jp _- a, > S———————e (owner =" io Dm Jihad Uhh Beaute-Artes Special the allies will attack at any rgo-|Slng to escape back across the| . iva) Slovakia.’ Berlin said con- |.» . am A. Ferguson, a neighbor, | There was one ,German defense i i p i / ments Hitler orders last stand,» Rhine under a storm of air bombs oy onslaughts “gained only a sald the younger Floyd's farm pos- Ny | Local Post Card [nots st, was among those cooling
E line along the Kyll river. But two] {their heels at Stark & Wetzel this Includes lone London headline said land gunfire. / vq : ting | S€Ssions had been left in his care acc later the 4th armored div | 2 - file ground” In itier Agh 8 put that he didn't know what to y ’ Hnored division moras.
London press reports said the |
The third Soviet army pushing
toward Vienna was attacking in|2® Independence recently.
Shampoo The tension was heightened by | PN | through the mountains, do with tiem arg across the Kyll through the] Found on German | He said it was the first time his Permanent reports from captured Germans| MECHANTS TOLD OF Soviet and Nazi reports said Rus- : {bridgehead established by the 5th | shop had shut its doors in 10 years,
: ! | “They've gone on ‘missions’ before | 4 : A POST CARD fromthe Inand |that Field Marshal Albert Kessel-| lsian armored vanguards had driven ns 3 |division and reached the Rhine in Push-Up ring had been transferred - from SHORTAGE IN GOODS jand come back broke," Ferguson re-
lto within 94 miles southeast, 128 called |three days. | diana Roof traveled all the way to "INJURED AS TRUCK Set | Italy to replace Field Marshal Karl| All worsted wool and combed |miles east and _153 miles north of , | A Crushing Offensive Germany recently and was found
or over spades... arte. aloe {Von Ramet a Geran | Som Sotion from the 1945 supply will go (the bomb-battered Austrian capital COMPOSER DEAD: |. Within. the tollowing week or io in the pocket of u Nazi soldier. AND AUTO COLLIDE we -in- : |
usually worth 35. [Every Permanemtll, [to the ‘armed services, I. J. Burdt, In heavy fighting. | days, Patton and Patch co-ordinated] “Never dreamed of finding this | Mr. and Mrs, Hilton B. Mendenabsolutely guaranteed. . | |
There 'w eculation th t Rund-|Pead of the OPA consumer goods | Neutral oti Tg Wasks RITES ARE SUNDAY the crushing offensive which now| on a Heinie here in Germany,” { hall, 1242 College ave., apt. 77, were Long Bobs Our Specialty | Ye Was specu’ation wt 4 or | division at Washington told 1500 In- have said tha : Thier was HOLLYWOOD. March 23 (U. P| Virtually is completed. | Cpl. Frederick H. Gronauer, 1130 |injured yesterday when their car ALL WORK GUARANTEED ||stedt might have been: killed or. on 1c retail merchants in Cadle contemplating a retreat to the Ba-| 00D, Marc . P.).|
> : : ex : ! Perhaps because his position was | N. Kealing ave, wrote Miss Alice |and a truck collided in front of 521 wounded m a Yoon: allied alr 28M}; ornncte last night. -| varian and Awa pd beyond —Funeral services for Nat Burton, |pelow the only remaining stretch of, McMahon, Roof manager. |E. 22d st. rman Fa0guar Kesselring| Merchants also” were advised of | Vicuna oy Stan 2 He oa 43, composer of the “White Cliffs/the Siegfried line, Patch took the| Cpl. Gronauer, who danced at | David -Cooper, 31, of 2125 W. SATURDAY | had been Tealled mn to lead a|or> regulations pertaining io i ea Ten orce the RAne aNd or Dover,” will be conducted Sunday | inglorious role of pinning down Ger-| the Roof often before he became a | Morris st., driver of the truck, was > J low : . : = , . : i i i 1% ii. | Y : - OPEN ALL DAY | maaiid or die" fight for the Rhine. |[reeze of clothing prices last Mon | R Soviet advance through Vienna afternoon in Santa Monica, Cal. mans in their pillboxes while Pat-| G: I., is a member of the 83d ini- |arrested on charges of reckless driv
: : day. OPA officials explained that| os ton's tanks ~speared south and! fantry division. {ing and drunken operation of a vé= + PERMANENT \ The first thundering blows of ihe freeze was ordered after cloth- Might thwart the plan and hasten His body will be sent to New Yorks, heast to catch them from be-|
iv | | , | | It is believed that the Jerry took |hicle. WONDER-WAVE $3% 'the offensive already had been) oo ooo) hen per cent the end of the war. | City for interment. | hind.
struck by the allied air forces in|. =. ; the card from a member of the | Mr. Mendenhall received a broken I Ho deds of square miles|0U7INE the last year. Other Armies Gain |° Burton, who also. wrote the cur-| The 7th did its job under most| 83d since many of the soldiers knee and a mouth injury and Mra r se is of the Ruhr and northwestern Ger- The freeze will apply to 132 cate-| The reported new offensives tem- | rently popular “Don’t Ever Change” severe punishment from the Sieg-| from this division danced at the Mendenhall had a broken foot and : many were littered With smoking ories of clothing and household porarily overshadowed the grinding|and others, died yesterday from a|fried guns. It took casualties dog-| Roof while they were stationed at |cuts.. They are in Methodist hose ruins after ‘the great obliteration furnishings. |down of German pockets on the |heart attack. gedly as it pressed up to contact the’ Camp Atterbury. pital. raids of Wednesday and Thursday. Upwards of 15000 allied war-
| planes raked at the enemy’s for- To Give the Young Look of Spring!
ward defenses and supporting
| communications in.the two-day at- : COLD $ 50 | tack, obviously aimed at blinding : ;
Long or Short
the German front commanders and | choking off their flow of supplies
WAVES {and reinforcements. At least 98 I. Extra Special . . . Worth | German planes were destroyed . . an . $12.50-515.00 ++ « Looks like {aground and aloft yesterday. Natural Curly Hair!
| Lt. Gen. Courtney H. Hodges’ Broadcloths with A, B and C cups . . . with American 1st army also was throw-
I tal | < . : Shampoo, * 2 and | ing its weight into the battle of the adjustable backs! Also rayon-and-net and rayon
and $1.50 | Rhine with a drive that threatened : ») @) \V.YJ | S TA 53 and-lace combinations. and nets! White, tea Finger Wave: momentarily to explode into the rose and some blacks. |southern flank of the Ruhr. 1 OPEN EVERY NIGHT | The American radio report of the . Al | capture of Siegdorf was not immedi- S T R k 1 UNTIL 10 P. M. | [a Sse | oO Garter Belts with Four Elastic Supporters 18 Experienced State-Licensed Operators said the Yanks had cleared a nine-
601 Roosevelt Bldg. 6th Fl mile stretch of the Sieg river's PR VI : . 7 : 20r | coiithern bank from its confluence Where the Fashion-Wise In your choice of two widths! and ® with the Rhine eastward to Hennef. : . . . jo ey Hennef, three miles southeast of LLL (Leos nh
Siegburg, and’ Buisdorf, direetly across the river from Siegburg, both SURLSLIDDREUBIMS | were captured in the American ‘ ; | sweep. ” ol s | | At the southern end of the bridge-
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