Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 23 March 1945 — Page 8
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to land in Denmark about April 15 : | to open up a fourth front.
: in the coming months.
'|that German occupation authorities
write too glaring headlines that the war is over or anything like that. It may be almost over or it may last a long time to come. “The fact is we have destroyed a lot of enemy forces. How much resistance the enemy can put up yet remains to _be seen.” Bradley said that the 15th U. 8S. army “probably will be in an active role before too long.” He said that for a while the Remagen bridgehead was deliberately held to a small area awaiting completion of clearing the regions up to the Rhine. This was done, he said, to avold committing too! many forces in too scattered a
J manner,
However, he said, with the rapid!
or predict future operations.
{had dared to hope and at very light
up to the Rhine more forces can be sent into the bridgehead for concentrated expansion, wo Bradley declined to Jomment
The dash to the Rhine, he said, was accomplished “faster than we
cost.” Disgissing the reported transfer
re — INDIANAPOLIS TIMES 8 |Nothing to Stop Us Along Rhine Now, Bradley Asserts
. (Continued From Page One) | advance of the 3d and 7th armies
Tokyo. There the bishop was under constant observation but was free to go abroad in the city, The department stores were empty of goods, he said. All decor ative metal and been removed from the city. Iron fences had disappeared, : Bishop Olano spoke venomously of the Japanese execition of Gen. James ‘H. Doolittle’s fliers who raided Tokyo while he was there, “When Doolittle came,-the Japanese suffered their greatest humiliation. They never expected the allies to come. They thought
-
JAPS WAR-WEARY, INVASION IS URGED
(Continued From Page One)
taken to Tokyo in the hold of a ship. En route he was allowed on deck only one hour each morning and evening and was fed only dried rice and fried fish. After his internment in Tokyo, the Spanish ambassador there obtained his release to a procuration house of the Jesuit society in
at first the planes were Japanese, | “To disguise their humiliation they exhibited the wreckage of a plane they said was one of Doolittle's, but I never believed fit was. Pe “When they executed the fliers, their papers carried headlines— ‘Every allied pilot who comes here will be executed’.” = -
COMPOSER WAS D. A. Franeis Scott Key, author of our national anthem, served as district attorney in: Washington, D. C., for
FRIDAY, MARCH 23, 1945 HOLLAND'S "NEED" FOR ~
"FOOD NOW CRITICAL
LONDON, March 23 (U. P.), —
Gerbrandy sald today that thou sands—‘“possibly tens of thousands" -—of residents in occupied Holland face death by starvation unles§ they are liberated or food conditions are alleviated before June, “They cannot last until June une less present relief supplies from Sweden and Switzerland are maine
three successive terms, 1833-41,
tained,” Gerbrandy warned.
of Field Marshal Albert Kessel-| ring to the Western front, Bradley said: ’ “Kesselring was quite successful in Italy and maybe the German high command thought that on his | record they needed him here - maybe because of his ability, maybe | to try to restore confidence.” " Bradley added that Kesselring “arrived at a bad time.”
(Continued From Page One) they have in their depleted army
first line goes. It looks as if the first swell of the Churchillian “one last heave” now ison. Predict Denmark Smash As if the Germans didn't have enough to think about, Scandinavian sources said they expected the allies
The report recalled Prime Minister Churchill's promise that the allies would hit Germany by air, land and sea from the north, as well as the east, west and south,
A Swedish broadcast quoted the Free Danish Press Service as saying
in Denmark had notified local Danish authorities that the evacuation of towns on the East Jutland coast “may be expected in the near future.” Only a few workers, civil servants and officials will remain behind to maintain ‘essential services, the broadcast said. Plan: Evacuation Jutland is.the mainland portion of Denmark, jutting up out of the northwest corner of Germany, Why the Germans chose eastern rather than western Jutland to be evacu- | ated was not explained. { The Germans might fear an al- | lied attempt to force the Skagerrak and Kattegat to land on the east
Signs Point That ‘Last Heave' | Against Foe May Be Mounted |
jcoast, or they may want more room
stores to use for defense when Shep [event of a landing on the west
|
to maneuver in the east in the
The report came in the midst of German broadcasts reporting fever- | ish allied preparations for an allied!
smash across the Rhine in a win-|
coast. | {
Warned to Flee Rhine
Allied radios broadcast another) proclamation from Gen, Dwight D. Eisenhower urging inhabitants to] flee the Ruhr valley to escape death] in the coming offensive. | This one was directed especially to| workers in the arms factories of the| valley. It told them to flee to the| countryside and take foreign slave] workers with them to help with | farm work. “Remember the power of the party | and the S.S. diminishes day by day,” | the proclamation said. “Act now to] save yourselves.”
| MIGHTY AIR ATTACK ENTERS _THIRD DAY
(Continued Feige Page One) |
and their escort of more than 350 and |
Mustang fighters blasted gunned the German traffic lines in| the path of a reported allied of-
HOSPITAL SCOUTS TO GO ON TWO-DAY HIKE
Boy Scouts -and Cubs who are|
3 patients in the Rotary convalescent |
home of Riley hospital will go on| an overnight hike tomorrow and | Sunday. They will camp at Thomas! Jd. Crosley lodge. \ +" The, Marion “codticy "caper “ot; the National Foundation for In-|
fensive about to explode across the. Rhine into the Ruhr. | Earlier today British Lancaster heavies dumped 11-ton “volcanos” bombs and other missiles oh a rail-, way bridge at Bremen, main trans- |
port link between northwest Germany and the Western front. The U. 8. heavy bomber targets included Osnabrueck, Rheine, Muenster“ &id iS ld forth of | the Ruhr and ecklincHausen, |
the-war offensive from the -west, ...}}.
fantile Paralysis will sponsor the|Gladbeck, Hengstey, Geisecke,! activities of this Buffalo patrol of Unna-Borgumnz, Holzwickede, and Boy Scout troop 83. Arthur F. G. Siegen in the east and southeast Gemmer is scoutmaster, reaches of that industrial area, | The other six patrols of troop 83| /Throughout the morning and into will meet in St. Paul's Episcdpal the afternoon allied bombers church. They are sponsored by streaked across the channel in|
Legion, and Delbert O7 Wilmeth is|four large forces had flown toward
t| chairman of the troop committee.|Germany.” ’
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Netherlands Prime Minister Pieter
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| FRIDAY,
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