Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 26 March 1945 — Page 4

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Hospital Treatment for Returnees Debated. (Continvicl: Wom Page One) dress inquiry proposed by Rep.

“HOUSE JOCKEYS _ON VET INQUIRY|

4 .

dy

(Continued From Puge One)

They were ridden down by Patton's tank-riding doughboys. The German army itself appeared to have abandoned the battlefield on the vital southwestern road to Berlin, The 3d army already had seven or

Philbin.

He asserted he saw “no need” for|in the area immediately south of|pyshed on another three miles withcreation of a special committee and Coblenz and farther south between |i, about six miles of Dorsten and

that he believed Brig. Gen. Frank T. Hines, veterans administrator,

more bridgeheads across the Rhine

Mainz and Worms. ; German spokesmen said Patton's

tacking along the southern flank of Montgomery's ‘assault, line were reported advancing almost at will through completely-shattered Ger= man defenses, ! Vanguards. of the 30th “Old Hickory” division. captured Huenkg, seven miles beyond the Rhine on {the Lippe river. The Yanks crossed the Lippe and

{abouts-'s miles northwest of Essen, | Germany's greatest arsenal city.

C. R. Cunningham reported that the Germans in the path of the 9th army apparently were not fighting, Hundreds of Nazis’ were surrendering at the sight of the advancing Yanks, abandoning formidable gun positions and pillboxes without a struggle. At least 20 enemy towns and villages were taken yesterday and early today by the four allied armies on the Westphalian plain bordering the Ruhr. Returning fliers reported that the entire plain for more than 40 miles beyond the Rhine w#ds a dead,

ini Sri : THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES Patron Closing on Frankfart ds German - Defense Lines East of Rhine Fall Apart

Jap Radio. Says U.S. Troops

OKINAWA ISLES _|Overseas Soldier Protests.

INVADED: TOKYO

ww

Closer to Homeland.

(Continued From Page One)

and possibly two task forces of the Pacific fleet were known to be in the Okinawa area. Headquarters did confirm .that battleships, other warships and carrier planes had bombarded Kerama Retto—which includes Tokoshika,

.

(Continued From Page One)

as saying, “I saw my duty and I did it.” . - But‘ it didn't close the incident. This morning Cpl. DuRee and the three ticket-holders went to police headquarters, refused to pay the fines, demanded a court hearing. Their case was slated in Municipal Court 3 for April 3. The marriage party drivers who received stickers were Bernard L. Taylor, 235 8. Walcott st.; John

Amer sok

Arrest of Wedding Party

The ceremony had taken place shortly before at the Friendship church, -Spruce and Prospects sts. There had been a brief reception at the home of the bride, the former Miss Melvalena Hubbard, 2134 Prospect st. 3 Cpl. DuBee fought on the Normandy beachhead and at St. Lo, where he was brought down when shrapnel sent a piece of a church crucifix spinning against his head. On Feb. 23 he entered Wakeman General hospital at Camp Atterbury, . 3

MONDAY, MARCH 26, 1945

ro

REDS 35 MILE FROM AUSTRIA

Third Russ Army Group in Drive, Berlin Says. (Continued From Page One) |

Gyoer and were lesg $han 78 miles southeast of Vienna. The new assault widened the of fensive front to at least 130 mile and. put. well over 1,000,000 R troops on the march in a des termined bid to thwart Naz plang

Coffin, 1405 DeLoss st., and Joseph

was “doing a splendid job under men were storming the Rhine at a | ) . in Panic’ Report Nazis in Panic DeCenzo, 235 Walcott st. Their cars

» i southward to the| Aka and Zamami--along with Okindifficult conditions. dozen other points southwar Pemoralization "and g

{smoldering wasteland, dotted at in- His brother, Clarence; is batfling|for a last stand in the Bavari

v

2

4 —e— for Pimples

The Rankin resolution was of-| fered 12 days after Rep. Philbin] introduced his measure and criticized conditions in veterans’: hos- | pitals. ! Strikes at Writers | Referring to recent published articles describing hospital conditions, Rep. Rankin told the rules| committee he had been “getting a

good deal of information about the |

complaints and the men making |

them.” <3 One of the writers, he said, “was| mentioned 11 times in the-last Dies {Un-American activities) committee report as being connected with subversive organizations.” “If this were a civil matter, these | charges would make the author liable to criminal prosecution,” he asserted. Rep. Howard Smith (D. Va.), said

he “wouldn't like to see the investi-|to engulf the big industrial center gation directed at the men who by nightfall.

are making the charges.” Rep. Earl ©. Michener (R. Mich.) observed that “evidence of guilt sometimes comes from unsavory sources.” Hines Welcomes Probe Rep. Rankin replied that he could “sense an uiterior motive by some writers who have been interested in

Karlsruhe corner.

panic Were |i. vals with columns- of German

awa and other jslands in the Ryu-

least of Frankfurt

reported spreading like a brush fire

; p " he German > sel barely .340 miles through the ranks of t Deyoid. Wesel were ey armies east of the Rhine under the

from the Berlin-bound Russian army 8 . on the Oder river east of the enemy Sune allied ground and air as- . capital. Patton's troops beyond the |S8U!ls. : Rhine were barely 200 miles from| The entire west bank of the Soviets.

Thousands of Prisqners

Patton's famous. 4th. armored| division rode through scores of German towns and villages in a breakneck dash that carried across the Main river at Aschaflenburg, 20 miles southeast of Frankfurt. Berlin-said spearheads of the-4th armored stabbed 13 miles northward along the main to Hanau, 8'; miles and 240 miles

The: allied armies in the north

pockets in the Karlsruhe corner. - Those Nazi remnants were being

flank of Patton's 3d army. t

captured on both sides of the Rhine |! since March 1. The ability of the)

southeast of Berlin. Other 3d army columns were sweeping in on Frankfurt, Germany’s ninth city, from the south and west at a speed that threatened

coming questionable, Resistance Disintegrates

Staff officers of the American 9th army asserted that German

{integrate along the vital northern | flank of the Ruhr. Darmstadt Falls United Press War Correspondent

Thousands of dejected German

refugees fleeing eastward in terror.

the was said to be in Rhine from Switzerland to Holland |were few signs of enemy troop move- | was reported officially to have been |ments between that city and the |cleared of all but a few isolated Rhine.

| Moellen, Lippedorf, Lohnen, Vorde Japan.

mopped up rapidly by the U, S. and Letkampshof, two to six miles] 7th army moving up on the right|east of the Rhine, were taken by

At least 300,000 Germans had been a Widening 15-mile stretch of the, ‘45g nites from the China coast

remaining enemy forces to hold their| yond the Wesel-Sterkade railway | thin lines west of Berlin was be- | embankment where the Germans| | tried ‘briefly to halt the onrushing Yanks, .

re[sistance already had begun to dis-4 DEAD OF INJURIES

kyus chain stretching down from the southern tip of Japan to Formosa on Friday and Saturday. Closer to Japan A landing in the Okinawa group would put American ground forces

Muenster in Flames Muenster itself, 40 miles beyond he most advanced allied columns, flames, There

homeland as the marines on newlycaptured Iwo, 695 miles south of

Dinlaken, Gotterswickerhamm, |

However, IWO lies only 750 miles south of Tokyo, whereas Tokoshika is nearly 1000 miles away

y its. a he Ot} army Is its advance from The Okinawa group also Is less

IVer-pgti£outkeast or. Wesel, lat a point south of Shanghai. The American drive carried. bes) Tokoshika and the other islands in the Kerama Retto appeared of no {importance themselves except as bases which to attack Okinawa, site of a naval base and important air installations midway between Kyushu, southernmost of the Japanese home islands, and Formosa. Okinawa, largest island in the IN AUTO COLLISION: sow of the same name, is 67 miles long and has a maximum width of Miss Virginia Leonard, 1222 N.|10 miles. Thickly-populated, it has

nearly twice as close to the Japanese |

prisoners were flowing back through | the 3d army front with word wat SENATORS TOLD OPA

the wehrmacht was abandoning |

Frankfurt in a desperate race “ CAUSING MEAT CRISIS = automobile accident last Feb. 124. She was 15.

{escape Patton’s armored riders. | Radio Frankfurt went off the air|

| Chester st., died in City hospital i last night of injuries” received in

(Continued From Page One) Miss Leonard was injured when

a conspiracy to overthrow this gov- suddenly early today after flashing

some 450,000 inhabitants, of which 66,000 are concentrated in the Naha area of the southwest coast, opposite Tokoshika Jap Ships Sunk

were decorated with “Just Married” placards.

WAR IN EUROPE MAY NOT END QUICKLY

(Continued From Page One)

two allied bridgeheads were quickly merged to a 30-miler width, and contact between ground forces and advance’ airborne units took only six hours instead of the planned three days. Inthe south, Patton's armor drove 40 miles in 18 hours to take a bridge 32 miles east of the Rhine. Add to this fantastically rapid allied thrust through the Rhine defenses the Russian advances on the Berlin and Vienna fronts, and it is clear that Germany already is defeated in a militagy sense. Why then is not the end of the war within a few weeks a certainty? Because .a defeated army is one thing ‘and -a suieide army is another. 1f the defeated German army obeys Hitler's repeated order to fight to the last man and the last

Japanese reports of landing op-|

ernment.” “I think we can show it,” he added. : Rep. Rankin was accompanied by Geén. Hines, who earlier had told the veterans committee that charges of maladministration in hospitals were “unfounded.” He said he “welcomed” any investigation, _ Urging the broader inquiry by an independent group, Rep. Philbin said he had received scores of complaints from veterans and their families about hospital conditions.

JANITORS NEEDED

Men, not now employed in essential industry, are needed to fill janitor positions at Stout field. They are asked to apply at the U. S. Civil Service commission, 52 Federal building. Veterans will be given preference in selection.

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Dothese symptoms |

Betray your Age?

Do yoy—-like 80 many women bhethe ages of 88 and 52—suffer hot flashes, nervous tension,

j= badly beaten German captives. | in g | already had been taken since. Mont- | te. reduce redness, sorenes

word that American approaching the city.

tanks were pennsylvania” had told him that

istadt, 15 miles south of Frankfurt} fell to Patton's famous rolling 4th|ders were driving packers into armored division almost without a| bankruptcy despite congressional instruggle. : tent that they be given a “fair marLt. Gen. Courtney H. Hodges’ U. S.|gin of profit.” | Ist army forces were advancing| He said OPA could adjust these! {southeastward from their Remagen regulations satisfactorily” if they] bridgehead - toward an imminent| would abandon the social policy! junction with Patton's men. |" cur regards profits as a sin.”

Outflanking Ruhr Basin Current OPA price policies,

{added, ; At the northern end of the blaz- the “small fellow is in a much more ing Rhine front, the American 9th, : i British 2d, Canadian Ist and allied |P cor ious Position than the big Ist airborne armies linked up in a Iotiow. S04 }f De Zoes out of bys

: . {ness the big fellow wil] take over.” solid 30-mile bridgeh ing | f | gehead extending “Packers Money”

10 miles or more east of Germany's last great. barried in the West. { La-Roe blamed OPA for growth { In a great bid for one of the most Of the meat black market. He con|decisive victories of the war, the tended that. its price ceilings deny {four armies were swiftly outflanking | packers a fair margin of profit and {the industrial Ruhr basin and | force them to reduce their slaugh{sweeping up thousands of demoral- ter. Then the black operators step i to - take advantage of the More than 10,000 Ndzi prisoners SCareity. La Roe said thé new subsidy on amery sent the four armies of his|beef., amounting to a maximum of 21st army group storming across the | 50° cents a hundred. pounds, won't | Rhine Friday:night. Field disgatghes| do much good because slaughterers said the toll was mounting hourly. | still will lose from 15 cents to 50 Almost 60 hours after the start of | cents a hundredweight.” { Montgomery's “win the war” offen-| Senator Joseph. C. O'Mahoney ‘sive, the Germans had failed to|(D- Wyo) meanwhile said in a throw in a single major counter-at- Statement that the “whole story” of tack. {the shortage is that producers are Elements of one panzer grenadier Rot allowed the cost of production.

he

. division were reported in action on | He said he had arranged for a dele-

{ the British-held northern flank. An- | 83fion of cattle growers to appear

the car in which she was riding more than half the meat sold in [3nd an automobile driven by AlThe big industrial city of Darm- that area is from the black market. | bert Revell Jr, 2223 N. Butler ave, La Roe said OPA meat price or-!collided at 13th and Denny sts.

foster monopolies because

erations in the Okinawa group fore) lowed announcements at. Guam of | the sinking of eight Japanese ships | in the northern Ryukyus Saturday | and the wrecking of six industries] in a, Superfortress raid on Nagoya | in Japan proper Sunday. Helldiver. bombers and Avenger torpedo planes from the 5th fleet pounced on &n -enemy convoy _consisting of three large cargo ships, two destroyers and three other ves-|

U S RAID CRIPPLES {sels west of Amami Gunto in the | 1 vi northern Ryukyus and sank every! FORMOSA INDUSTRY “~:

Navy search Liberators, (Continued From Page One)

Revell was arrested on a charge of reckless driving. He was fined $1 and costs and had his driver's license suspended for. six months by Judge John Nihlack on March 9.

operat-

ator stages in the plants received gn; attacked a medium sized cargo a number of direct hits by 2000- |

pound bombs.” The plant, which was divided into | two sections and powered. by water |

not revealed. 25 Buildings Hit Reconnaissance pictures

ie : ; after 225 Marianas-based -Superfor- | the allies

breath, our spring victory may. be delayed until summer:

with the marines on Iwo Jima. Meanwhile, the city's anti-noise policy * continues, according to Mayor Tyndall. ‘The mayor said he had instructed police to ban all “unnecessary noises,” including the sounding of sirens. “We don't expect to please everybody,” sald the mayor: . Another of those not particularly pleased is Donald L. Barton, 1252 Burdsall pkwy., who likewise was accused by Patrolman Euliss of unnecessary horn blowing. ‘The location was the circle. The time, 30 minutes after Cpl. DuRee’s wedding celebration was bluntly terminated; And it was another wedding entourage. “We've had nothing but trouble ever since we've been married.” lamented Mrs, Duree today.

MUNCIE PILOT BRINGS

and Austrian Alps beyond Vienni Von Hammer acknowledged tha the Russians had forced the Hr on a wide front, but asserted thaf apart from a “narrow bridgehead southwest of Leva, they had b unable to obtain a “firm foothold on the west bank, On Hungarian Border Leva lies on . the Hungarian Slovakian border some 30 miles ui the Hron river from its confluen with the Danube. Forcing of th Hron would open the way for a attack on Komarom, 20 miles_ to the west, one of the main strong holds on the trunk railway fr Budapest to Vienna. Far to the "north, the- Russ siege of Danzig and Gdynia, twi German-held ports on the Ball appeared to be entering its 1 days. Transocean reported that in th

CRIPPLED SHIP: HOME

(Continued From Page One)

heels of two Incendiary attacks which burned out five square miles of the city, was said to have damaged six of Nagoya's key industries. Photographs of the raid showed

past 24 hours the Red army mad deep penetrations of the inner de {fenses of Gydnia—a statement tha | may foreshadow the fall of the Baltic port, | Soviet forces captured = subu {within a mile and a half north west and two and a half south an i southwest, of Danzig and within a mile and a half southwest and tw

That “if” is something on which severe damage to the city's electric/miles south of Gdynia yesterday

neither Eisenhower nor sians have the answer,

Hitler. The evidence so far is that

some German units®are surrender-!subishi

ing when they get a chance, but

that many others are fighting to|although several of its buildings

the death. End. May Be Swift

| |

pottery and textile factories. The massive Mitengine plant, . apparently was not crippled seriously, however,

were hit,

It 1s possile—even proasie— MARGARET WILLIAMS

that the final strain will be too much for most of the German army; that the disintegration, once begun, will be swift. But even that may not prevent

ing from an undisclosed base, also|SiZable pockets’ of fanatical Naz| made their first annéunced pene-{fo0PS from holding out many tration of the Ryukyus Saturday | Weeks after the allies have ocey- |

pled most of Germany.

they still hold.

,have startéd the last

| | i

RITES SET THURSDAY

Rites for Mrs. Margaret J. Williams, Dayton, O., formerly of In-

the Rus-| power plant, steam power plant, an|They also widened their wedge bes! Nor has|ammunition works and

tween the two ports to seven miles, Report 8. 8. on Guard

A front-line dispatch to the Mose cow newspaper Pravda said the Germans had mobilized all men’

land boys between the ages of 61

‘and 16 to defend Danzig. i

German prisoners said Nazi 8, 8, (troops had been stationed behind | [front-line infantry units with ine]

| structions to shoot any soldiers whe.

|

dianapolis, ..who died yesterday in| shaw signs of retreat or surrender, Cocoa, Fla, while visiting a daugh-] . One of the last two German)

ter, Mrs. A. F. Childs, will be held at. 1:3 p. m, Thursday in the Flanner & Buchanan mortuary, Burial

| Died The Japs| will pe in Crown Hill. ship. Results of the attack were | Dave done that ofterf, and the Nazis |

{have done it in the French ports

Mrs. Williams moved to Dayton in 1941, She is a member of the Methodist church and the Amer-

- So all we can be sure of is that jcan War Mothers in Dayton.

She 1s survived by another daugh-

[pockets in [East Prussia was) {trimmed to 20 square miles and {almost completely liquidated with the capture of Heiligenbeil, 27 | miles southwest. of Koenigsberg.

LEG BROKEN BY AUTO

Joseph O'Brien, 56, of 725 8. Mise souri st, received a broken leg yese

4 Ir Jer y 1 : from Jitsugetsu ‘lake, had a total tresses attacked Nagoya early Sun-|'ound in Germany and will not{ter, Miss Blanche L. Williams, Day- terday when an automobile backed

capacity of 170,000 kilowatts, : {day showed that 25 buildings at the Among the main war factories t0| mitsubishi aircraft engine works in feel the power loss will be the tWO| Nagoya, Japan's - biggest aircraft large aluminum plants at Takao and manufacturing center, . were deKarenko. : |stroyed or damaged. They included They* have ‘an. estimated 407000+ the main engine plant. ton capacity each and are believed: pour buildings in the Mitsubishi to -have provided 15 per cent of] glectric company Japan's aluminum supply. X One Bomber Lost One Liberator was lost to antiaircraft fire in the Jitsugetsu raid which was the second 145-ton strike in two days on Formosa.

across the street; along with an electric power plant, {a steam power plant, an ammunition works, a pottery and. textile factory also were damaged in the raid. , The photographs also showed that, (139.000 “square. feet—five square

40's

+other—tenk division was reported’ |moving into the threatened area under heavy aerial attack, but the rest of the enemy's reserves ap-|

| peared to have been immobilize | Air Support Continues

{ Hundreds of American and allied! |waprlanes thundered out over the | battlefield at first light this morn-

Wehrmacht's mobile forces into its fourth straight day, stoking hundreds of fires already burning over a 10,000 square mile area of the Ruhr and Westphalian plain American 9th army troops

}

REPORT HITLER ~~ CALLS: MINISTERS

(Continued From Page One)

at-

a preliminary contingent of 10,000 | specially-trained SS troops had been {placed at the disposal of Gestapo :Chief Himmler and begun training as the nucleus of an underground army to carry on guerrilla warfare after the collapse of organized re- | sistance. | Figaro said the Nazi master plan | provides for systematic sabotage of {the peace treaty and attacks on occupation forces. Five “hedge-hogs” or resistance areas were said to be planned, each with its -own general stafl and secretary supply dumps. Executions Reported

Figaro as’ East Prussia, Wuerttemberg, Western Germany or Hamburg, and one or two areas encompassing Tyrol, Upper Bavaria and Upper | Austria. . | A Daily Telegraph dispatch from | Zurich said three Nazi leaders in Baden had been executed for urging that Germany lay down her arms. Twenty-four Browhshirt leaders also were said to have been arrested in Baden for insubordination,

TTT ITTAIIE

| | |

The five areas were identified by |

before trie comniitiee LOMOITOW. While the..5th- air force was con-

maas———

TWO DAYS REMAIN IN RED CROSS DRIVE

Although $317418 is vet to be raised, the Indianapolis Red Cross

search and patrol planes of the Tth fleet ranged over the China sea to shipping lines. Six freighters were destroyer edcort and three fighters damaged in .the latest sweeps Friday. succeed | > The 13th

war fund campaign can

providing workers redouble

efforts and

thei Lnelr

central Philippines Liberators and Mitchells hitting Cebu city with 210 tons of bombs In the ground cempaign on Luzon, ‘bloody fighting raged in the rainswept northern mountains around Balete pass, ‘escape route into the Cagayan valley,

Friday = with the trend -of increased Russell "J. Ryan general chairman, said toda: A total . of $828,082, or 723 per cent of the $1,145,500 goal, has heen accounted for since the drive opened March 1, The balance of $317418

giving. continues,

centrating— om the island fortress,

continue the blockade of Japah's

sunk or probably destroyed and a!

: iE, { air force also »main-! tained neutralizing attacks-in the

| miles—of Nagoya had been burned out in B-29 fire raids March 12 and 18 The two fire raids were estimated to have devastated 11.6 of the total city area, with most of the damage in the center of Nagoya.

EAGLES AUXILIARY TO GIVE LUNCHEON

The Ladies auxiliary of the Fraternal Order of Eagles. No. 211. will hold a covered dish luncheon at 6:30 p. m. today at their hall, 43 W, Vermont st., followed by a meeting at [8 p. m, | The supper will be held at 6:30 p. m. tomorrow in the Canary Cottage,

naa

annual birt

must come in by 6:30 p. m Wednesday, deadline for solicitation. “Our 3000 volunteer workers have done:.a remarkable job so far and if these men and women keep on driving and our citizens keep on giving, we can succeed in this, the greatest appeal in Red Cross history,” Mr. Ryan said. Citizens ‘who have not yet subscribed were asked today to have their contributions ready when -the volunteer calls. Workers were again urged to cover their territory as quickly, but as thoroughly as possible,

BLACKOUT CURTAINS AT WHITE HOUSE GO

WASHINGTON, March 26 (U. P.) ~Workmen at the White House to(day were removing the last of the PLAIN 1-PC. | heavy blackout curtains from the windows of the White House,

The heavy black drapes were put vD 0 i 5 S [up shortly after Pearl Harbor and J | used during air raid blackout: tests. S U | T 4 | or

It's Spring again ,

proms, parties, graduation the f

wants to look their best. S

every member of

the party!

Fs Rice. he Send. greetings that capture the Joy and Promise of this Sacred

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