Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 4 May 1945 — Page 9

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STKE CLOSES

W AGE PL A NT: ' (Continued From Page Are ern France, across Gerigany and |

i Street Pepa Tr Also sistance in thé snow-clogged Bren-

“Reported Off Jobs, (Continued From Page One)

overnment, is prohibited by law

| from hegotiating with unions and

had his legal staff compiling bpin- * fons tp that effect. © charged that the three dismissed | flood board employees had been

The mayor

“agitating.” Police guards were thrown around the million dollar sanitation plant, but no picketing or violence. was

. reported. A handful of C, I. O.

union members remained on the job but were unable to operate the machinery at sufficient capacity to

carry-on.

CANDIDATES LISTED

FOR JUNIOR C. OF C.

Candidates for the four offices of Junior Chamber of Commerce were announced to-

! day by the nominating” committee, i The election will be June 6.

Noble Biddinger -and Clifford R.

| Campbell were nominated for pres- | © ident,’ . wood Yockey were named candi " “dates for vice president.

Charles R. Ayres and Kirk-

Charles I. Sutton and William J. were nominated for secre-

James L. Sykes were nominated for treasurer, Retiring officers are Roger Beane,

president; Mr. Campbell, vice *pres-:

ident; Mr. Biddinger, treasurer, and Harry PF. Miedema Jr., secretary.

FOR THE ULTIMATE IN FUR PROTECTION . STORAGE Compile proieeiion

ault

CLEANING ;

ele

rips. repaired.

RE- STYLING oi

a stu ng Holl his ins

| ov er the Austrian Alps. The Tth army: met Hi re-

ner pass from Italian mountain troops who either had not received or were ignoring the general surrender order (issued by their defeated commanders this week. Die-Hards Quitting But nowhere else in the path of the American and: British armies were the Germans offering any opposition: early today. Even the diehard Nazi units facing the U. S. 3d army before Linz appeared to have broken after a brief attempt to block the prospective AmericanRussian “juncture that would com-plete-the envelapment of ‘Czechoslovakia. ® All fighting ceased on the Kiel peninsula. The Germans declared the Kiel and Flenshurg naval bases open cities, to be occupied at-will by the British. The German-controlled Oslo rafo said an “armistice” had been signed by’ the allied and German commanders -in Holland, indicating that the enemy had: surrendered unconditionally.

| elsewhere on the border.

~ Denmark, and possibly Dr. Werner

Tell of Dramatic Meeting . Both Stockholm and .Paris reports told without official confirmation of a dramatic meeting between Montgomery and Doenitz. Paris said the so-called “peace conference” was at Aabenraa castle ‘just [over the Danish frontier.: Stockholm agreed that it was there or

“The Swedes said Col. Gen. Georg Lindemann, German commander in

Best, German governor in Denmark; Josef Terboven, Reichscommissar in Norway, and Adm. Fritz Boehm, German commander in Nor-

water, and theft, Air-cooled

cleaned, derothed, glazed cirified. " Ti es, buttons, minor fashion into 1946- New York or

bs allies could impo e any . \ peace

‘|against bolshevism.

| way, attended the. reported: Yptrenyler conference. A Stockholm dispatch reported the organization of a new Danish cabinet ‘under Premier Wilhelm: Buhl. LT

said the Doenitz government presumably was somewhere in south Jutland. One report” said Doenitz appeared to have stabilized headquarters at the Moervich naval base near Flensburg, where. Heinrich Himmler also was reportéd vaguely to be. “Most of the Swedish reports emanated from Malmo, directly

a $s a narrow channel from Copcig. capital of occupied DenMas,

Northern Surrender Sten A B. B. C. broadcast over an | American army - transmitter said [that a general surrender of German. forges in the crumbling northern redoubt “may come at any moment.”

from Zurich said Count Ludwig Schwerin von Krosigk, the new German = foreign minister, had ousted Dr. Karl Frank, Nazi extremist, as governor of BohemiaMoravia in a move calculated to please the allies. The main factor complicating any peace negotiations probably was the allies’ insistence that Germany must surrender to Russia as well as to the United States and Britain, - The Germans repeatedly have shown their willingness. to surrender to the Western allies,

Defeat Admitted

The Germarr attitude was démonstrated “ again by Nazi Munitions ‘Minister Albert Speer in a broadcast over the Nazi-occupied radio at. Kalundborg, Denmark, last night. Speer admitted Germany had been beaten to the .point where

Speaking as though an armistice already had been signed, Speer called upon .the German people to repair railways,~ build houses and otherwise prepare for a lean future. Norwegian Nazi leaders, including Josef Terboven, Reichcommissar and Adm. Fritz Boehn; German commander in Norway, were said to be participating in the Denmark surrender conference. Stockholm dispatches said the British had~reached Aabenraa, 15 miles inside Denmark and 55 miles north of Kiel, It was at Aabenraa that some reports said Montgomery and Doenitz were engaged in surrender negotiations, + oe Planes Blast Ships

R. A. F. planes had a field day over the Danish and German ports

pired creation , . for only $1875 plus cost of materials.

Jj were "understood to have landed in

2nd Floor Kahn Bldg. *7 N. Meridian

|at least nine and. damaged more [than 100 ships of all sizes trying to

still in German hands. They sank

Unconfirmed Stockholm advices |

An Exchange Telegraph dispatch |

Copenhagen that * Russian troops were attacking or had landed by air on the Danish islands of Lolland, Moen and Falster. This report was broadcast by Swedish radio. sta= blansa . he 1 rear. areas along the Baltic coast southeast -of Denmark, ‘some 500,000" “Germans, fheluding 10 gen- | erals, surrendered to the British | yesterday. » British a American troops formed an almost solid junction with the Rusiity along a 60 to 65-mile- front th. from the Baltic Vesheraayoirs the port ‘of

lon the Elbe in the south. Canadian troops assaulbing the German North sea pocket drove to] within five miles of Emden ° and | 12 miles of the naval base “of Withelmshaven.

Japs to Avenge 'Heroes' of Axis

By UNITED PRESS The collapse of her axis partners, will not affeft Japan's determination to fight on to victory and world rule Prime Minister Adm, Baron Kantara Suzuki has informed the Japanese people.

In a speech to the Japanese naand heard by the United Press

sympathy for Germany's loss of Hitler. He admitted the “unexpected development” in Europe ' would add to difficulties of Japan's position in the Far Bast and would increase Japan's “weight of responsibility to-win the war for the axis alone.” “We are . fully prepared,” he declared, “to avenge the fallen heroes, Hitler and Mussolini.”

or -

flee from German-held harbors! north toward Norway. i The R. A. F. pilots also knocked out 1350 vehicles clogging the roads bumper-to-bumper en route to the ports. A London Daily Express dispatch | from Stockholm said British forces

Jutland, the mainland portion. of Denmark, but this appeared an error based on the British invasion of Jutland by land. . A former United Press correspondLent also denied by telephone from

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THE ADIANAPOLIE TIMES

T Repod Surender Parley Held: Nazis Say Holland Is Lost

Wismar in. the north td, Wittenberg |

tion, broacast by the Tokyo radio. |

Red army troops, meanwhile, were rapidly stamping out German resistance across what was left. of the eastern front.

THe 4th Ukrainian army liberated the last of pre-war Poland with the capture of the industrial center of Cieszyn, 17 miles southeast of Moravgka-Ostrava, and a cluster of surrounding towns. . Other elements of the 4th army rammed southwest of Cieszyn on a 50-mile front, advancing through the Moravian gap to within 33 miles of a junction with the 2d Ukrainian army on the flat Moravian plains pf east-central . Czechoslovakia. The 2d Ukrainians captured Zlin; 38 miles southwest of Waltersdorf, [anchor point of the 4th army's left Ying.

R OFFICIAL WEATHER

ee, #8. Weather Bureau i (All Data in Central War Time) | |

«

“May 4, 1945

Sunrise : pT | Sunset

{ PreCipitation 24 hrswend 7:30 a. m.. 01 [ Tot al precipitation sitice Jan.’ 1.. 16.44 | Excess since Jan. 1 . 288

“rie folowing. table show || emperatures for 12 hours ending at 7:30 Ip. m, yesterday and the lowest\ temperailifés for 12 hours ending at 1:30, a. m. | today:

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