Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 2 April 1945 — Page 4

' west of Berlin and only 40 miles

o

MONDAY, APRIL 2 2 1085.

lies Drive Past Waenster: - ; Dash for err ol 4 ig EY

|

“Remember Fitch A

were mopping up fanatical German

(Continued From Page One) regulars and Volksturm units, in-

British tanks. ‘The atmor rode dow |.,4ing scores of women and teen-die-hard German gunners in the c.g gris « streets of Muenster. Oytriders swept Aschaffenburg already had lost all] east, northeast and southeast .1014,.¢icq) significance,. however, with | points 100 miles or more beyond the (ne 7th army's 12th armored: divi-

THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

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|American Tropps Smash Forward on Ok

(Continued From Page One) fire of shells into enemy positions

kinawa'

warships alone hurled 5000 tons of | Geiger's «. 3d ® marine Wmphibious steel and explosives into the Japa-|corps, conquerors of Guam, at the nese defenses, paved the way for northern end of the beachhead.

Rhine. Osnabrueck, 27 miles northeast of Muenster, was menaced by the Brit-| ‘§sh advance. Tank columns stabbing in from the west were reported eight miles from the city this morning and going fast. Late dispatches said a. British polumn was moving past Lengerich, eight miles west of Osnabrueck. Forty-six miles west of Osnabrueck, the British captured Enschede, the main escape port for the! German 25th army fleeing Holland. Luftwaffe Evacuates

Other 2d army columns reached the Dutch town of Hengelo, five miles northwest of Enschede. They broke into the burning city of Rheine, 20 miles north of Muenster, where the Luftwafle already has abandoned and destroyed noe of its

greatest fighter stations in the west, |

Montgomery was wheeling a great part of his British 2d and.Canadian 1st armies northeastward toward

the North sea coast along a front|

of almost 60 miles from the Rhine town of Emwerich and Muenster, At Rheine, the British were only 94 miles from the great port of] Bremen. At Hengelo they were] 19 miles east of historic Arnhem and 42 miles from the Zuyder Zee.| Canadian army units farther to the west were 10 miles and more]

| sion running riot:through the enemy | lines 35 to 40 miles southeast of the city on the road to Nuernberg. | | Vanguards of the 12th arniored reached the Main river at Marienberg, west bank suburb of Wuerz-|

defenses preparatory to a crossing into that city this morning. | | At Marienberg the Americans were | 54 miles northwest of Nuernberg. | Another 12th armored column was about the same distance from the, shrine city .at miles south of Marienberg, Trap Nazis The 7th army's 10th armored division pushed 15 miles southeast of the Rhine of Manheim along the super-highway to Karlsruhe and linked up with French 1st army troops at Wiesenthal. An undisclosed number of. Germans were trapped behind the French and American spearheads at Wiesenthal. The 9th army's armored division] linked up with the American 1st| army near Lippstadt, 17 miles west | of Paderborn to seal off ther Ruhr. It was indicated that doughboys of the American 1st and 9th armies were swarming through the teem{ing factory cities of the Ruhr to {root out and capture the trapped German divisions there.

city

"burg, and were probing the German §

Bad Mergentheim, 22! f

Fitch ave. in Ravenswood changed

-+American forces nearly

ahead of the ground forces. Some 1500 carrier ‘planes also shuttled back and forth over the island. A Japanese communique. conceded that the Americans were continuing to reinforce the- beachhead, but claimed that Japanese forces had , intercepted the invaders in “furious fighting.” The enemy communique also asserted that 41 more ships in the invasion armada had been sunk or

damaged.

The landing on Okinawa brought 7 twice as close to Japan proper as they are on Iwo, 750 miles south of Tokyo. The northern tip of 65-milezlong Okinawa lieg only 330 miles southwest of Kyushu; southernmost of the Japanese home island. Capture of the island would give the Americans strategic air, land and sea bases from which to mount an eventual invasion of Japan proper or the China coast, only 400 miles to the west, Adm. Chester W. Nimitz, commander of the Pacific fleet, hailed the invasion as assuring “our final |

{decisive victory.” |

into a small lake after the city’s heavy rainfall yesterday and today.

In the 7200 block of the avenue (above) th e water measured from 18 inches to three feet.

After Okinawa What? China ROSCOE P. FREEMAN

Or the Mainland of Japan? MADE BUDGET CHIE.

(Continued From Page One) |

porth of Emmerich, still operating} some Nazi units near the east- |ang wait for masses of troops to be | under a security blackout but ap-|awn end of the pocket were re-| {brought out from America and | parently closing rapidly on Arnhem |, ted fighting fiercely in a v

(Continued Erom Page Onep target, no ack-ack opposing | them. (of accounts for 15 years, four years It is believed that there were any-| as Republican deputy examiner and | where from 60,000 to 80,000 enemy |ll.vears-as field examiner.

with

Cuts Jap Lifeline Adm. Richmond Kelley commander of the invasion fleet, 'sald “capture of Okinawa would (sever Japan's lifeline to her south-

Turner,

for her fleet to operate or base in southern Japan, Traffic on the Yangtze river, lifeline of the Japanese army in China, lalso would be: shut off, he said.

army under Lt. Gen, Simon Boliver Buckner Jr, former commander in| Alaska. Front dispatches said Maj. Gen. | John R. Hodges 24th army corps, veterans of Leyte, landed at the

the landing on Okinawa by the pvr Losses ‘Incredibly Light’

Not a ingle marine was killed or | wounded in the first half hour of the invasion and, eight and a half | hours later, most marines were yet to see a Japanese soldier. American

southern end - of the beachhead against little more han occasional sniper fire. The first regiment ashore swept a mile south across rice paddies and grain flelds to the burning farm village of Kue, then swarmed down onto the flat, rolling shoreline leading south to Naha.

Opposition Light Command post radios reported battalion troops along the shore before dusk last night had driven through Chatan, eight miles north of Naha, against light opposition,

including: some mortar and rifle fire,

The whole area south of the | landing beach was hopeycombed | with tombs, caves and pillboxes, but | (all had been abandoned by the | | Japahese, Other army troops, spearheaded by amphibious tanks, struck inland | and seized the Kadena {then fanned out = against still {bafflingly-light resistance. The Japa{nese blew up a few bridges, but

{army troops. Hill Captured Another army column captured | a strategic height at Nozato, north-

airfield,

casualties were described as ‘“incredibly light.” The marines went ashore at, and south of, Zampa cape, some 16 miles north of Naha, and western= “most point of the island, in the first hour captured Yontan airfield. Pushing on to the northeast, the marines were approaching a small but rugged hill group a mile and a quarter inland. from the landing | beach at Sachini. Still farther northeast was the T70-foot peak, Yentan Zan, 4'% miles iriland. Yontan Zan bars the way to the narrow Ishikawa Isthe mus, easily defensible entrance to or exit from the northern two i thirds of Okinawa.

| General Amazed Gen. Geiger, ‘veteran of many other Pacific campaigns, expressed amazement at the lack of resistance met by his forces.

“I'm damned if I've ever been on

a battlefield lke this,” he said. | ‘They're sunk now.”

Both army and marine unitd lern empire and make is impossible |others were captured intact by the Were three miles or more ‘inland.~ §

{ Within the 8%-mile-long beach= head lay a dozen or more villages, all of which had been captured or by-passed. The Japanese were known to have

The main landing on Okinawa, lernmost point of a hill mass domi- | 80, 000 to 80,000 troops on Okinawa

was preceded by landings beginning [nating the southern sector of thei \and their failure to oppose the

| last Monday on the Kerama islands | assault area. | landing was even more surprising in view of the fight to_the death put

from the southwest.

ain | purope.

troops here,

Upon graduation from Franklin

Patton en March Allied fliers swarming over the battle area reporfed that the Germans were abandoning Holland at top speed, giving up their V-bomb bases on the seacoast opposite London, At least 10 British tank columns were through the German battle screen, with their easternmost units 190 miles or less due west of Berlin. American 1st and 9th army forces, perhaps 25 miles closer to Berlin, were advancing flank to flank with the British, Doughboys of the two armies stormed through the Ruhr from the north, west and east to wipe-out the trapped enemy divisions, Patton's U. 8. 3d army struck through the German center to the gates of Eisenach, 152 miles south-

from the Naz government's tempo-

effort to break out and rejoin their fleeing army. Most of the trapped divisions, however, appeared ready to quit. The Ruhr was said to be festooned with white flags. : 250-Mile Front Front correspondents - predicted the entire Ruhr would be cleared within a very few days.’ That triumph, more-than any other allied victory in the east or west, -signalled the end of Germany's bid for world conquest. Stripped of the great arsenals of |

Hitler boasted would endure for a | thousand, years had little hope of | living for another thousand hours. Even the clean-up of the Ruhr, however, failed to slow the Berlinbound sweep of the allfed- tank armies crashing into central Germany on a front of more than 250 miles. The American 1st army's 3d arm-

day, church on their transports 13 hours | earlier than folks-in New York.

Ultimately, the key to it all will

be the infantryman with his rifle and a ship to get him here—and both are detained by the European war, which has lasted longer than had been foreseen.

Before invading Okinawa yester-| marines and soldiers went to|

Then they launched their landing | boats and walked ashore. Easy Invasion It was virtually a bloodless beach-| head they established on this stra-!

the Ruhr, the Nazi regime that |tegically vital island, only 356 statute

miles southwest of Japan and more | {than 7000 miles from the United States. Not since Kiska have we

{ had such an easy time.

I watched the landing through glasses from the bridge of an am- | phibious flagship, Yesterday after-

If that is true we cannot under-|cpllege in 1922, Mr. Freeman spent] stand why they didn't oppose our | two vears at Athens, Greece, with | landing more "vigorously. {the American consular service. He | The only living things we/later was connected with the. Fire- | encountered were civilians. They | stone Tire and Rubber Co. in Chi{were friendly and bowed low to the cago and the B. F. Goodrich Co. in| marines who then led them to re- Seattle. At one time he was travel- | | ception. camps. ling secretary of the Phi Delta | [Theta fraternity. The budget {$6000 annually, state

Long an active Republican, U.S, RUBBER WORKERS Carlson sat in the Indiana |senate continuously from 1931 10 RETURN T0 WORK | through 1941. Now county attorney

of Huntington county, he also is G (Continued From Page One)

| Copyright. 1945, by The Indianapolis Times

and The Chicago Daily News, Inc. directorship

pays

Mr

.. P. chairman there. A former law partner of Mart J {O'Malley chief justice of the supreme court, he is a member of the | Masonic and Elks lodges. Mr. Yoder is third district publican chairman.

tor Arthur Cc Ingles. A meeting} {with the union Saturday failed to| solve the problem. The union is

the Amalgamated Association of Re-

noon I followed the troops ashore | Street Railway and Motor Coach | and walked over the major part of employees, an A. F. of L. affiliate. |

rary seat at Weimar. ored division, which raced more than

Approach Nuernberg 100 miles north from the Remagen In the south, the American 7th bridgenead to capture Paderborn arid Prench 1st armies knifed deep | and then wheeled west to jein the . into the German escape routes Sth army, was reported battering leading to Hitler's “last redoubt” eastward at top speed. in the Bavarian mountains. Cross Sieg River The Yanks were barely 40 miles| The 3d armored's vanguards were |, from the a a A Neu Pinched out this morning. They apmoving on Stuttgart and the Vichy- | parently were ttriking for the Rulirite hideaway at Sigmaringen, 31+ Berlin highway, possibly in conjuné- | and 85 miles to the southeast. tion with the 9th army's 2d armored At the far northern end of the division and units of the British 2d battlefront, the Canadian ‘1st army army. rolled 10 miles into Holland from| Sixty miles southwest of the jungcits Emmerich bridgehead on the ture point at Lippstadt, other 1st Rhine and struck from Nijmegen army troops broke aeross the Sieg

the marine beachhead with grayhaired Maj. Gen. Roy S, Geiger, commanding general of the marine | 3d amphibious .corps trops, who!

{comprise half of the 10th army.

Casualties Low At every command post we visited on this picturesque pinetree-clad island, the 60-year-old general: inquired about casualties and everywhere the answer was a fantastic; | ally low figure. . There were, for example, but -10|

wounded and ong killed in one ma- |

rine regiment up to 2 o'clock yesterday afternoon, according to Lt. Col." Fred Beams, Cleburne, Tex. who is the executive officer of the

in a new drive on Arnhem. ..jriver into the southern flank of the ~The German. 25th. afmy was re- {Ruhr basin and entered Siegen... | ported abandoning all of Holland, Only moderate rifle and machine including the vital V-bomb bases gun fire met the first Yanks into on the séacoast. - |that city. It was expected to fall in Muehster, Bielefeld, Paderborn, short order."

Kassel, Eisenach, Pulda and Wuerzburg, kingpins of the Nazi defensive : Mother's Dread Ends on News

system in the West, were in allied hands or about to fall. Sons Is Captive Capture 350,000 ’ — : |

Late front dispatches indicated there was little or nothing left in the path of the Berlin-bound allied ‘armies, : More than 350,000" Germans “already had been captured in March. | Cocky British and American troops | streaming eastward toward Berlin | told reporters the enemy's complete A collapse would be only a matter of | days. « ; { For to the southeast; the Ameri- | can 3d army battled into the-streets| of Kaseel, pivot of the splintered

German defenses in the center of| the Reich only 165 miles southwest

regiment, “I'Ve seen’ only Six dead Japs, colonel added.” : An ‘Easter Present’ Casualties were described as ° | ceedingly light,” too, with the 24h army. corps making up the rest of | the 10th army. : Some called it an Easter present others dubbed it “April fool.” The general commented: “Doggone, I never, never have been on a battlefield like this before, It's just like a rehearsal.” This is officially credited wi ing the ' tion of the war in the “Pac date.” . More than 1400 involved and 1500 planes are providing close support Point-Blank Range It was exhilarating to watch the, {battleships slamming away at point |

th be-

ToC are

|blank range in the grand climax to!

a solid week of preparatory naval bombardment, to. see the gunboats touch off swooshing barrages of rockets,

” the |

‘largest, amphibious per:

carrier-based

Army labor officers entered ar-| bitration efforts in a move to ease {a traffic tie-up affecting service personnel and war workers between | Indianapolis, Ft. Wayne and Terre - | Haute and: intermediary points.

Caused by Fisticuffs ~ Both the bus and rubber worker walkouts were in protest ‘against | | company supervisors... Bus workers {are demanding’ the dismissal of Barlow Neely, supervisor of inter-| city operations for the I. R. R. A fist fight between an employes) and a department foreman pte- | |cipitated the strike, which ended today. United Rubber Workers of America | (C. I. 0.) will negotiate with the teompany tomorrow, - bes Kati ai {the wir labor board disputes di- - [vision said. The executive board .of local union No. 110- called the strikers {back to ‘work yesterday, tual séttlement has not yet been reached.

RADIOS IN GERMANY TAKE FRANTIC TONE

(Continued From Page One)

{

to allow Austria a plebiscite on| whether she desires to continue as! part of the Reich. If this proposal should not be accepted, according to the report, Hitler was said to have threatened to shoot all allied officers iow held as war prisoners as well as to exes cute hostages from occupied coun-

.U. 8. Rubber Co.| The,

but an ac-|

ANTI-PIGEON FEEDING ORDIANCE WANTED

A. city ordinance against feeding pigeons on park property will be asked by the park board tonight at city council meeting. This is the board's latest move iin its efforts to prevent Mrs. Dortha Hunter and other pigeon fans from. interfering with the current anti-pigeon crusade. The ordinance would make ofLenders liable to a $25 fine.

BOYS TO BUY MIXER FOR PACIFIC HEROES

Presentation of $90 to purchase an ice cream making machine -for servicemen in the~Pacific will be made by Harvey Knox, represent= ing the Lauter Boys’ club, and Richard Walker, - representing the English Avenue Boys’ club, at 8 p. m. {Friday in the Lauter Boys’ club, 11309 W. Market st. . MEET IN NEW HALL | The Supreme Forest Woodmen lcircle will meet in—its new location, Red Men's hall, 137 W. North st., lat 8 p. m. tomorrow. Mrs. May Beaver, national attendant and Slate manager; will speak about the tional institute and tire Braly Bh drill team of . Ramona | Grove will initiate a class of seven candidates,

Advertisement

1,000 TRUSSES 10 BE GIVEN AWAY

of Berlin, Front reports said the Germans were fighting furiously for Kassel Its fall would turn their central

defense line along the Wester-Fulda |

rivers.

Beyond Kassel the Germans had |

no major water barrier short of | the Elbe at Magdcburg, 100 miles northeast of Kassel and only 65 miles from Berlin. Bridgeheads Across Fulda The Germans apparently were trying to- form a defense line anchored along the east bank of the Fulda river on a 30-mile front south of Kassel, using strong tank and artillery forces.

The 6th armored division already |

had two solid bridgeheads across the Fulda, one in Kassel and the second about 15 miles southeast of that city at Spangenberg. The second column was slashing

i . Only watch now missing ... son, Pvt, Thurman 8S. 622 N. | Alabama st, is German prisoner.

| (Continued From Page One)

Moore,

| prisoner of Germany. is still missing. Ill for years with heart his mother, Mrs, Clvdia Moore N. Alabama, was ordered to bed by her doctors when word came two months ago that the 19-yéar-old infantryman was missing There she lay brooding, certain that so long as the

trouble,

watch

| was not returned neither would her |

son be safe. Student at Tech

Today, although still in poor

The watch | ,

622

feeling |

to see flight after. flight of planes thunder in to bomb and strafe and rocket. | After this, landing-boats paraded iby with flags flying and started toward shore-with Lheir precious human cargoes. Half a miTe~from |shore they surmounted a nasty reef iand kept on going, At 8:46 a. m. {they hit the beach Okinawa was invaded force along. a stretch of coast. No Craft Lost No landing craft were lost enemy action on the half of beach I visited and no mines were | found. It was a beach no’ bodies, no damaged equipment, no crowded first-aid stations, It was such a strange looking {beachhead it didn't seem as though we could be landing on hostile

in great its west

to

clean with

the |

tries and 250,000 Jews remaining in Germany. There was no grounds for believing the report had any.authenticity. The so-called underground Nazi movement in the west was the subject of iiriumerable Nazi broadcasts: These said that German men, women, and boys and girls were banding together in an underground |

THIS MONTH

Kansas City, Moc.—A Doctor's Invention for reducible rupture is proving’ so successful, an offer is now being made to give everyone who tries it a $3.50 Truss at no | cost. This invention has no leg movement, ¢ alling themselves] | straps; no elastic belts, or leather | ‘Werewolves.” Werewolves, in| pands. It holds rupture up and German folk lore, were wolves ineltn Is comfortable and easy to habited by human spirits who made | wear. After using it many report forays at night, | entire satisfaction. Any reader of Other broadcasts told Nazi lead- | this paper may {ry the Doctor's ers to “win victory or perish.” | Invention for 30 days and receive | “Wage war everywhere entirely the separate $3.50 Truss at no cost. without mercy or yielding,” the ap-| { If you are not entirely falistied with peal to the Nazi leaders said, “After | the inventior Ruepetin it, but be sure : sola v13 we blededd our-1’® keep the $3.50 Truss for your the collapse of 1 pledg trouble. If you are ruptured just selves body and soul to battle for .jte the Physician's Appliance Co. our country’s right to. exist. Now | 6239 Koch" Bldg, 2906 Main St.

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the hour of our sternest testing has| Kansas City, Mo. for their trial offer.

[10 to 20" miles west of Okinawa: |

Maj. Gen, Andrew D. Bruce's army division quickly seized all eight islands in the group and set | up heavy artillery to support’ the Okinawa invasion. A seaplane and harbor base was established: at one island. An unprecedented 10-day air and sea bombardment,

Rin

DOWNSTAIRS ~£ AYRES

FOR

Late reports from the army -front

1 “Even lighter resistance, during which sible, was met by Maj. Gen. Roy 8. Japan proper to Formosa,

77th said heavy American equipment was |

{ rolling inland over narrow roads six to eight feet wide and | sandy fields. Many troops boldly upright through rolling fields of sugar cane, sweet potatoes and | grain. if pos-

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up by the enemy garrison at Iwo. Jap Planes Destroyed Okinawa also 1s the most heavily populated Japanese island yet ine vaded by the Americans. Its 435.000 inhabitants comprise nearly nalf | the entire population of the Ryuk= yu island chain, stretching from

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Second Lt EE

DEAD— Pilot of a force, 2d i son of Mr, ¢ leitner, 4509 Feb. 14 on ¢ Previously a plane ‘cra forceman hi ized two m had returne held the air Lt. Payleif force in Jan seas in July uate of Cat a member o Catholic chy ment, he hac Lukas-Harol Surviving a brother, £ in France.

With the 106th divisio son, husbar Robinson, 1( been reports Jan. 6 in B Sgt. Robi Camp Attert with the 83d but had be: 106th ‘after had been | one-half yes resident of E Surviving the parents, Robinson, | brother, Cpl. with the a California. . Machinist's who had bee was killed -same time a An infan! army, 8. §j husband of 52 N. Bradle wounds rece Sgt. Voge, tered servic across in Sej been statione was a forme Ia. Sgt.- Vog

fantryman

heart. Surviving | small son, wk Thomas; a bi in England, and Mrs. Her

Sgt. Clarke and Mrs. Pa fison st, w Dec. 23, the d day. He was Overseas th was an infal army, and F “combat infan “purple heart, A graduat school, he wa versity where student, unti 27, 1943. He Tau Delta 1 had first bee: later had tak When that ) he was {rans Surviving I are a sister,

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Pfc. Davi husband of N 108 E. 43d st on Biak islar on March 22 Pfc. S8herw

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eastward at a rapid clip to join| health, Mrs. Moore is.up and in her | §rritory. units of the 4th armored division own words, ‘feeling very much bet-| ‘We control the sea and air. There closing, on Eisenach, 40 miles south- | ter. " is no sight of the enemy fleet. Our east of Kassel. | Pvt planes have had a field day over the | Fulda, another . German anchor |Moore, of the same address, was point 40 miles southwest of Eisen-|serving with the 80th division of ach, was entered by units of the |Gen. Patton's 3d army when listed American 26th division, who drove as missing in Belgium since Dec. 28 into the city from the north and| The young private attended south. ‘Technical high school .and was emFight in Aschaffenburg tployed at P. R. Mallory & Co. beOn Patton's right flank, fierce fore entering service 14 months ago. street fighting still raged in Aschaf- | He went overseas last October. fenburg on the Main drive 25 miles | === -

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