Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 30 March 1945 — Page 9
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HOUSANDS ATTEND £00 FRIDAY RITES
"(Continued From Page One)
English’s. and Keith's theaters, the War Memorial plaza, and every availabe chapel and place of wor-
ship in the city.
Age-0Old Story All have the opportunity to pray today. And for all an age-old story 15 read, sung ana told. It is the story of a lad born in a manger and brought up as a carpenter's helper in a small Mediterranean village. He never traveled very. far from his home, had no gold and so far as is known, was not an educated person. But on the first Good Friday he gave his life that all men might live ver ast: He was tried, found guilty, Crowned with thorns
and hung until dead between two|church., There will also be services at noon in the Salvation Army |
thieves on a cross.
Today, nearly 2000 years later, Indianapolis commemorates His
sacrifice... Speaker after speaker will hold worship from noon until |
around the world today will link that sacrifice, in spirit, to the sacrifice of our young on the fighting fronts. It will be told that they,
FRIDAY, MARCH 30, 1945 toy” Br THE" Brigiistythewter; cars|
Nazis Surrender by Thousands: Hint Aries MINE OPERATORS “REJECT PROPOSALS
¥
ries the connotations of the above |story. Dr. Jones was to repeat the | sermon at the 1.-p.-m. service at the First Baptist church and at the 2 p. m. service in the North Methodist church. He has been giving Holy Week addresses in the city since last Sunday, Palm Sunday, afternoon. His concluding talk will be at 7:30 p. m. tonight wn the Memorial Baptist church:
invited here by the Indianapolis church federction which represents many - Protestant - denominations. He has been a missionary to India for more than 30 years and is the author of many religious books. Union Services Set During the period of three hours, noon until 3 p. m., when Christ is said to have hung on the cross, tunion services are scheduled for | Christ Episcopal church on the cir- { cle, and the First United Lutheran
citadel. | Other downtown churches which
| 3 p. m. are the St. John's Catholic, | Zion Evangelical and Reformed {and the Roberts Park Methodist { churches and the Wheeler City
Dr. Jones is the guest speaker |
| | |
northeast toward Bremen and) Hannover.
‘Hold Your Fire’
out to pound the Germans’ fleeing| road columns, : British tank forces were so close on the heels of the retreating enemy that the air attacks had to be called off for a time to avoid hitting allied troops. - In the Muenster area, the British were less than 40 miles from a juncture with U. 8: 1st-army tanks, last reported- at Paderborn, 190 miles southwest of the Germanr capital. The Yanks were ranging out al-| most unopposed to the north and) east of that road ‘center after a sensatiomal 100 - mile flanking sweep from the Giessen area. Mile-an-Hour Clip
On the 1st
army’s right flank,
the American 3d army's ‘plunging
flashed to R. A. F. fliers swarming was imminent, the radio said. The Luxembourg radio said Muen- | miles farther west.
shrine city of Nuernberg. A Brussels radio broadcast placed | 5 rmored divisio
Cracking; Report Revolt Within Reich Near
(Continued From Page One) southeast. Its fall would break the throw a road block across. their _|enemy's last major water line short! path. the Nazis down.
of the Elbe and Berlin. | The allied-controlled Luxembouig
| ster was reported draped with white | {slashing east, northeast and south-
Unconfirmed reports again were | east of Giessen af top ‘speed.
flags.
heard that 3d army troops were | racing southeastward for the Nazi |
| Lelbach,
THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES cor.
EEE
ap
Hodges’ charging tanks rode mines fo- prevent a strike, | believed.
THI Ts
»
(Conlinyed From Page One)
it was
Two otherscolumns were charging Secretary of Labor Frances. Per-
spearhead
30 miles
Patton's 3d army, meanwhile, was
Clear Frankfurt Late field dispatches, lagging hours |
{that {reached” without WLB compulsion. $100,000,000 a year to the cost of
{radio said one of the greatest mass|noithward og the east flank of the kins asked the WLB to step Inte The advance ‘was going ahead so| surrenders .in history was under {Paderborn rapidly that at one point a, dra-/way all along the western front. mati¢ “hold your fire” order was | Revolt against the Nazi vegime Paderborn and 27 miles west of her compromise proposal for settlej Kassel, and Titmaringhauseri, eight! ment, which” had been accepted by U.
capturing the wage-hour controversy late last southeast of night after the operators rejected
M. W, President John L. Lewis. Sees WLB Compulsion
Miss Perkins sald it was “obvious no. ‘agreemerit could ‘be
The fate of the WLB's order will
{behind his racing tanks, said the 4th be decided on its expected pron had driven 30 miles|vision that any wage adjustment
them 30 miles northwest of the. ct of Giessen to capture Lauter-|finally approved shall be retroactive
city at a point about 85 miles south- | east of Frankfurt. | Hodges’ men raced aver more than 100 miles of twist-| ing German rcads almost without firing a shot They reached the Paderborn area] just 24 hours after the jump-off| from Giessen at dawn yesterday. - | The allied-controlled Luxembourg |
ar northward |
{non-existent {miles northeast to 16 miles southeast | { {the soft coal fields mounted for alin its April issue today that AmeriThe 4th's northeastern wing was|While yesterday when Miss Perkins - |astride the Giesenach-Eisenach mili- {revealed that Lewis had accepted . | {her compromise. e {radio said Lt” Gen. George S. Pat-| 4). 24 army forces wiped out
tof Giessen.
bach and a cluster of towns in that{to April 1.
i
tary highway
too, give their lives that others| Rescue mission. From 2:30 to 3|tank columns were plowing north- | ton’s American 3d army to the (n, 1. enemy resistance in Frank-
may live and worship God in what- |p. m, the Indianapolis Council of | east and east from Giessen at a [southeast was loose on an equally i. yesterday afternoon after
ever way they choose.
; | the Knights of Columbus will spon- { mile-an-hour clip, striking along “The Lamb Slain from the Foun-| sor the “Way of the Cross” devodation of the World,” title of Dr.! tions in the World War Memorial E. Stanley Jones’ sermon at noon! plaza.
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the main Frankfurt-Berlin superhighway. The German high command said {3d army forces were at Bad Wildungen, » 186 miles southwest of} Berlin and 19 miles southwest of] the Hessian“capital of Kassel. Kassel, keystone of the Germans’ Weser river line, was being outflanked from the southwest and
Danzig Seized; Vienna in Peril
(Continued From Page One)
ing troops along the Leite river line just a few miles in advance of Soviet spearheads for a last stand to save Vienna. One Soviet column threatened to flank Vienna from the south. Still another ‘column clearing the’ western—tip of Hungary was within five miles of the Austrian border and 40 miles southeast of Vienna. Marshal Feodor I. Tolbukhin’s 3d Ukrainian army group rolled up to the Austrian frontier on a 14-mile front yesterday and a Free Austria radio broadcast said the Soviets crossed the border at several points, liberating some villages. Far to the north, the great Baltic port of Danzig and Gdynia fell into Soviet hands, according to the Germans, although a Soviet communique last night reported only the capture of the center of Danzig and the greater part of its port area. : Moscow -announced the final liquidation of the German pocket in East Prussia 20 miles southwest of | Koenigsberg by the 3d White Rus- | sian army group fighting under 92 | generals. Some: 80,000. Germans -had been | killed and 50,000 captured since { March 14 in‘the pocket.
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spectacular armored drive headed for Leipzig and a possible juncture with the Red army. | Radio Luxembourg said Patton's! men were racing into the Thuringian forests on the road to|
tEisenach, 155 miles southwest of |
Berlin and 90 miles west of Leipzig Both the 1st and 3d armies were pursuing a phantom German army | that melted away at their approach. | Only a handful of fanatical Nazi | SS troopers opposed the 1st army's | triumphal sweép to Paderborn. Patton’s men were reported meeting virtually no opposition. United Press War Correspondent Robert Riclfards reported that the Nazis. were falling over themselves in their rush to surrender. { 150,000 Prisoners The 3d army’s prison cages were! jammed with more than 150,000 | captives rounded up in the eight- | day advance beyond the Rhine. The last major fighting force left | to the enemy in western Germany | was believed to comprise about 16,- | 000 Germans reeling back before | Montgomery's men in the north. | The import of Hodges’ break- | through and Patton's reported sweep on Eisenach was staggering, Spokesmen for the two armies! said the German front had disin-/ tegrated completely in their path. “All organized German resistance | may be expected to cease very soon,” reported United Press War Correspondent John McDermott from the 1st army front. Half-Way to Berlin From their starting point in the Remagen bridgehead a week ago, Hodges' men already have covered almost half the way to Berlin and were still going fast against little or no opposition. In the drive on Paderborn, the big German airfield at Langeweisse, almost mid-way between Geissen | and Paderborii, was captured. The Yank column_met only one German fighting force en route— 34 Nazi elite guards who tried to
NAZIS BUILD FORTS FOR FINAL STAND
(Continued From Page One)
|
“greeted the Nazi plan to continue resistance from this Alpine hide out enthusiastically. . Treatment “meted out to German 8ivilians by Soviet “troops; according to seamingly authentic reports reaching here, has done much to harden" this fight-to-the-last-man determination. Swiss military experts that the redoubt can be defended even if most of the German army is annihilated before it can reach there. The Nazis will defend it witha few elite divisions, saved in time from the general debacle Meanwhile, 12 luftwaffe planes are reported to be waiting near Ulm, Germany. They -are-fueled with sufficient gasoiine to make a 40-hour, nonstop flight to Japan. Certain Nazi bigwigs will head for there should there be a general cxodus toward the Bavarian stronghold, according to certain circles. : Hitler himself, according to the same sources will ‘remain atthe helm of his shipwreck.
Copyright, 1945, by The Indianapolis Times and The Chicago Daily News, Inc.
| ernmost Japanese home island.
| of
{the Americai division secured Cebu’s
ppine |
unexpected stiff fight against a small force of Nazi elite guards. The former American internment camp at Bad Nauheim, 15 miles north of Frankfurt, was entered by |
| f units of the 6th armored division. |
(Continued From Page One) !
the. southern tip of Kyushu, south- to “guess” an amount between those | figures. She said all of the parties| Other task forces and a con-, Were agreed that the additional tingent of the British fleet were] production cost: would “be . about 25] ‘cents a ton. -
believed carrying a bombardment | Okinawa and other islands|
ea. Task forces of the 4th division alsn|{the operators have {were riding ‘rough-shod through the such requests from other German defenses 10|ment agencies.
Lewis is favorable -to that, but rejected two govern-
Prospects for averting a crisis in
Terms, Rejected
But. shortly befere midnight, she an! reported that the operators had rejected the terms a$ well as her re-!" | quest to make adjustments retro-| active to April 1. | ; fused to submit all of the issues to| 5
They
urther arbitration of any kind,
Miss Perkins said her overall pro- | posal eliminated 13 of the U. Mi
{ W.'s 18 original demands, including JAPS CLAIM FLEET i the 10-cents a ton royalty for}
| health and insurance benefits for]
- | union members, § She said: the estimates
i
Her terms were that the employ
——
also re-
RN
end RAS TRADES. Wa SLO ST | “organizations like .the American !plosives; premium pay of four and Bankers’ association are more in- :
eight’ cents an hour for second and terested in a | a peace with justice.”
{clothes and accessories hut pot ex1
_ PAGE 9
ace with profit than
ithird shift work; flat vacation pay of $75 a year for everybody; _ increase in tHe rate of all men in a
mechanical mining unit to within | $1 of the top rate; full strdight time and premium pay for all overtime spent in traveling to and from the coal face; raises in wage rates for outside day men, and inclusion of supervisory employes in {the U. M. W. | An operators’ spokesman. said that the proposals were rejected! I because “they would have added!
{production without adding one lump of coal ‘to the Jota) output.” TEAMSTER SCORES | AMERICAN BANKERS
| The International Teamster, of- | ficial - organ of the International Brotherhood of Teamsters, charged
des San
can bankers are working to | stroy collaboration at the | Francisco conference. In an editorial entitled “‘Bankers Sabotage World Peace,” the magazine edited by Daniel J. Tobin,
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{ CN “202 agprny, Bt on the ) 7 4 Vy n CRBae. i sz wg ncreased wages ranged from 95] ¥ & “gy cents to $1:58 a day. - She declined | 37 3 4
southwest of Japan into its eighth] straight day. Attacks Continuing i Pacific fleet headquarters con-| firmed that American ships had | continued attacks in the Ryukyu! chain yesterday for the seventh day. | Enemy broadcasts said the attacks were a prelude to invasion of Oki-| nawa island, Japanese base 380 miles | southwest of the homeland.
Admiral Chester W. Nimitz dis-| closed that a British task force, in action in the Pacific for the first time, joined in the Ryukyu bombardments Monday and Tuesday. British carrier planes concentrated on the Sakishima group, southwest of Okinawa, destroying 20 aircraft on the ground, setting fire to the {town of Ohama and destroying a small coastal vessel. B-29's Busy | The fleet action coincided with] new biows by American Superfortresses. A German Transocean dis-’ patch, recorded in London, said 150 | B-29's raided Tokyo .this morning with a new type of incendiary bombs | and set fires at several points. { The 20th bomber command an=| {nounced that a medium-sized force | {of the big bombers from bases in| India blasted Japanese oil installations in Singapore again yesterday. Japan's new totalitarian party, the Political Association of Great Japan, was inaugurated today with an admission that the Japanese homeland “already was a battleground.” The party, formed to meet the crisis, promised. “utimate victory.™ ” In the Philippines elements of |
{
large harbor with invasion. of nearly Cauit and Mactan islands. Gen... Douglas MacArthur's communique reported only minor action in the .ground campaign’ on Luzon.
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