Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 6 April 1945 — Page 10
4
onion (TOL SEAS am ant SRE a RE Eee and Save!
10 REDS SEEN
|
Jap Leaders Reported Ready to Pay Any Price.
(Continued From Page One) ficularly his frank statement that | the status quo which has prevailed since the German attack on Russia has long since outlived its usefulness. , The Russians, it can be revealed, | never have relaxed their watchful: ness on their Pacific bordérs. The Russo-German war have been brought to an end con|stderably earlier had the Man- | lehurian frontier been regarded as jsecure, | ‘But so far as can be, ascertained ithe autonomous Red Banner Far | Eastern .army never has depleted its (strength, (This force has been estimated unofficially at from 600,000 to 1,000,-
might
{000 men. It has its own independent bases of supply located in eastern [Siberia ) - | Japanese Treachery | The Russians, it should be noted, thave Jong memories, The Russo- | Japanese war was launched by the! Japanese with an attack which preceded a declaration of war. { ~The Russians forget nothing and {the treachery of Pearl® Harbor did | hot fail to make a profound impres{sion 1m Moscow, Strictly speaking the Russo- { Japanese pact does not expire until { midnight, April 24, 1946. However, [ Molotov already has enumerated the {reasbn why- the pact already “has |lost its sense." | It was this point to which diplo-| {matic observers attached the greatest significance.
12) 3 KK
~ Soviet Feeling Strong | Muscovites never concealed their
| ” Lod ‘ — { opinion of Japan, before as well as {after Pearl Harbor.
Te | Foreign Commissar V. M. Molo- |
RTRTL Now Only —
1S8(
lambassadbr expressed Soviet feellings that have prevdiled since June 1941, when Germany attacked Rus- | sia, and particularly since the outbreak of the Pacific war. Though the pact had been perimitted to continue in force despite the fact it had outlived its usefuliness, the Kremlin never permitted |Japan to blackmail Russia into { concessions, even in her darkest
days. No Interference
At the very outset of the war, {Molotov firgly told Tokyo that the [Soviet union would brook no inter{ference with shipments from the {United States to Vladivostok. | The Soviet press in the past few |months has been printing long {analytical reviews of the Pacific war. {emphasizing the swift change in the {Balance of power in favor of the allies. - ’ At the same time, Soviet disf TRE" thternar- atid ici dg vennt of {the allied victdries and bombings of lthé Japanese homeland. b| Last week the navy organ Red {Fleet for the first ‘time published elaborate diagrams and,.photographs of Japanese battleships and torpedo apparatus, again indicating Soviet interest gnd watchfulness.
WRECK 70 JAP VEHICLES i CHUNGKING, April 6 (U. P).— § | Aircraft of the .léth. air. force: tes stroyed 70 enemy vehicles yesterday in sweeps over Lunghai and Tungp®, a communique said today. One locomotive was destroyed and
TOKYO OFFER
{tov's succinct note to the Japanese
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(Continued From Page One)
pact, coming on top of the fall of | the Koiso cabinet and in the midst | 4; defeats, | niight lead Japan to ask for peace | |soon after the capitulation of |g st in
of ‘increasing military
Germany, : Stalin Told "Attitude The expected, a Tokyo broadcast con tended. * : : : Premier Matshal “Stalin's reference in a speech last Nov. developments in the international situation clearly indicated that the Soviet undergoing a radical change,” Tokyo said London
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military - observers commenting on the Tokyo statement said that approximately Japan's 2,000,000 troops in China Manchuria, opposite the Russian Siberian border. Russia's armies in the Far East have been cloaked in _ even more secrecy than those on the German
_ THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES... upanese Seeking To Keep Peace With Russia |
abrogation had been long|Japan.
"STATE GUARD DANCE
to Japan as an “aggressor” | 6 and “other |
4
attitude toward Japan was |
half of]
. lwere stationed in north China and]
fronf. How#Ver, it was certain that |
Cosh Saved by
Secret Pocket REPUBLICAN GROUP prrrsurcH, Apri 6 v. py. | PARTY IS- SCHEDULED!
lliaison officer, {s assisting the com“mittee.
|
{publican club will sponsor a card {party at 8 p. m. Monday in the
—Herbert Jones has a secret | pocket in his suit and Herbert knows how to keep a secret pocket a secret. Last night two thugs slugged Herbert, but th®y couldn't find
his money because it was in his secret pocket Herbert reported the attempted holdup to police, who. wanted to know where his secret pocket was. “Oh no,” said, “If I
Herbert told you it wouldn't be secret anymore.”
{ Cecil Taylor, Mrs, George F. Kleder, (Mrs. W. L. Murray, Mrs. Virginia [ James, Mrs. Ray Howard, Mrs. P. H. { Talbott, Mrs. C. Dolly Gray, Mrs. | Alex Clark, Mrs. Grace Showalter, | Mrs. J. J. McDowell, Mrs. Lola Kel:
~ . -
TS ry
a Sie oa aca a 4 Hr I Sa HCY , I —
185,000 FLEE HOMES | N SOUTHERN FLOOR .”
. NEW ORLEANS, April 6 (¥.:P.).| ; --Disaster agencies prepared for] JL they were prepared forall eventual- | their most extensive flood relief x
OS. : {operations in 18 years today, speed- Cs Military commentators said the|ing the evacuation of more than 85,- | \ Japanese éeny may attack Russia |opn persons along the banks of the , an attempt (o cut off such | Mississippi rivet and its tributaries strategic points as Vladivostok “on | from Cairo, Ill, south to the Gulf the” Siberian appendix opposite [of Mexico, : {| American Red Cross © workers, 'doctors and nurses were dispatched tothe critical - lower Mississippi SET FOR TOMORROW region where Louisiana residents p barricaded their levies to meet the The third annual dance of the [Worst flood threat in the state's hisEnlisted MéR's clubs of the 2d bat- | tory. talion, 3d infantry, Indiana state| Temporary disaster headquarters guard, will be held tomorrow night were set up at Alexandria, La. .on at the Armory, 711 N. Pennsylvania | the banks of the Red River, whose st. loverflow already had inundated Special invitations have been is- Several hundred thousand acres of sued to parents ‘of enlisted men to| farmland, . closed scores of state watch the silent drill ceremony pre- highways and isolated many cities.
the Soviets never would have” de-
“I'm sorry, Joe! I had no idea he'd been
| 4
Ty i} STETTINIUS TO PRESIDE You're never too young or too old A Ft. Harrison band will play | to learn the. new steps at Arthur
and Miss May Qogill and at WASHINGTON, April 6 (U, P.).—| Niles, a dance team, will entertain, | President Roosevelt today designated | po arity, Just a few delightful Pvt. William F. Feree, Company F, Secretary of State Edward R. Stet- p,jiq with a talented Arthur Murwill .be the emcee. Admission will |tinius Jr. as temporary president of [ray eucher will set you up with be by uniform and guest ticket only. |the United Nations security con-|{he Rumba or any new dance you S. Sgt. E. M. Everett is chairman | ference which begins April 25 in San |
of the dance. Lt. H. L: Simmons, HFrancisco.
ceding the dance.
Murray's and find new fun, new
-
|
The Washington Township Re-
club rooms, College ave, and 61st st., Mrs. W. H. McGeehan, general chairman, has announced. Assisting Mrs. McGeehan are Mrs.
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IT'S VITALLY IMPORTANT PROPER IRON LEVEL IN THE BLOOD
DONOR OF 7 PINTS OF BLOOD MORE BLOOD DONATIONS
Miss Edith Jane Meyer, 835 Trinity Ave, Bronx, N. Y., gave her first pint of blood on her 21st birthday, two years ago. To date, she has donated 7 pints. Other patriots are urged to donate blood for urgently needed plasma,
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