Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 20 August 1945 — Page 3
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: - had Ak sion of parliament, he and his fam- pe : . " ir - ae fis Vorway Places Quisling on PE ‘Occupation of Japan Is Due in 10 Days, Peace Emissaries Are Told . Charged that the exile govern- :
Trial as Nazi Collaborato imaed Fra Sage’ Ou) anttorenct rial gs az OI/1QDOIrQTOY ment that ruled with Haakon from (Continued From Page One) The landing on Japan itself] Sothe of the Japanese delegates on their airfields, harbors a - J . S , nd a purely mili Britain during the occupation also probably will be an all-American (had been acquainted with members mine fields to clear the way Tar Tolv ian 5 ference wud %
i with accompanying forces - ; (Continued From Page One) 1 the document. he deferided|was fllegal because if was dissolved A ying com {show insofar as ground forces-are of the American group before the|the occupation force. ° Bis Bovernaten vs Ds ede Pardement Inthe sadimer of posed of ‘ground, naval and air ele- concerned, because the other allies war, but there were no exchanges of | ; : . susrencer. chjoedt outlined the state's case. SS R¥2 "|. The naming of the Japanese. air:
Si ding egal Bs Bn IT moBis ihe lie supreme tn Lave no troops in ‘position for a pleasantries or reminiscences. sea pich alkied" vl : 'e revealed that statements from|man occupation and challenged the| 8. Protested against th -] v quick move 10 Japan. Kawabe Talks Most [fields on which allied’ planes would] pa g e gainst the retro Subject to weather that will e Talks Mos Shaw: Atom May
leichsmarshal Hermann Goering; [court's right to try him. active application to him sf laws permit the landing, it 1s anticipated Units of the British and Aus-{ pr; Gen. Torashiro Kawabe, head 4 was believed 13 have been) one ormer German supreme com- He also: and decrees made by the exile gov-|the Mmstrument ot surrender w
\ ONDAY, AUG. 20, 1945 2 : mn : i Tr ' - : THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES ; T iE » ie y ! . FE " ET Ca AS a Fr a oR OAC :
tralian navies, however, will take), tje Japanese delegation, sat op- of the main. points of discussion at Ruin Us So W hat? '
- ill be! ¥ art in the operation. | ; : . ander Marshal Wilhelm Keitel; Ba ooniated, he Ly Neville ernment while it was abroad. signed within 10 days.” : jp ne. pera on oiid direct | POL Sutherland at the long, black the meetings. The fields presum- | \ n prime minister Aimed for Best British and Australian armed conference table and did most of the ably would have to be lengthened | LONDON, Aug. 20 (U. P).=—
ormer German chief of staff Col.|of Britain, in the fall of 1939 to ithe emperor and his military com- i ’ 9. Asserted that he, .- |forces, he added, will take over the ..4 talking for his group and otherwise altered to accommo-| George Be ter Jen. Gustav Jodl, and Reichs- call ‘a European congress of nations he, as prime min occupation of all Japeresesiicid ers to Issue a general uncon- __Kawabe, @ short, dour man with date American aircraft which gen- Geuege ¥harg Shaw 18.4 lef ninister Alfred Rosenberg, : to the London Times today said
Nazi- oh Bert Jurther bleodshéd but re- | ‘ster. president and royal regent, areas in the Southwest Pacific south | SiHo0a] Sirterides Order to all their |g’ paid, round head, relapsed into a erally are heavier than Japanese jom's leading Jew-baiter, had been ge ed onty a polite letter of thanks|and his Nasjonal Samling gevern-| of the Philippines. He Re e surrender sort of placid informality after the types. | he could not deprecate the pos= . 'm t - » . : i S to o i . obtained by Norwegian Investi-| 2 Denied that Hitler in their| = , were ‘the de facto and legal Forces Will Be Armed | The headquarters conferences in Speping Mesung. iPr at SORRY for the supreme sibility of the world being exgators and would be introduced. [only meeting before Aprii 9, 1940— | Fulers of Norway. after Februagy, A’ headquarters spokesman said Manila went off with split-second meeting this morning hist } Soran er sumitied up the | ploded “now that we, the human Thus Quisling began the same the date of the invasion of Nor- | 1942. the first American occupation forces precision, and the Japanese dele- S : stori¢ conterence in 18 words: race, have begun Keying with
| At the conclusion of the confer- “They i - ordeal from which former Marshal I He Carma; were | 30. Reporad Hat $0000 Norvies: hig hid pSapan Prepared Louies Malnaned poer-fated ‘ences, the American staff arose and nn iil : gin the. atom.” Henri lippe Petain, Hitler's| 53 Hi dove wi if vay. satigy rigts denig he msi er | available weapons” He expressed) vealed he talls of § sou Pui iii oe Suierieng dismissed the Japanese, our plans concerning what we are | “What we have just succeeded puppet chief of staff in France, yya¢ ne (Hitler) had cautioned for-| 11. Forecast that some day his a hope for a “bloodless surrender.” harbor fortifications needed by Tey : wrecidte Vv ; eal lot ; jim doing al enOTMOUs expense 18 emerged only last week in Paris|... premier Benito Mussolini|countrymen would realize he aimed This presumably would - include | MacArthur, : |and Wi ry SE epalon id MecAripur had promised, the| makfmg an ounce of uranium Wh 3 Sem Be ne COM- | against taking Italy into the war. for Ke best and accomplished much the SOS omb, e seidier unless Trying to Cooperate | Tokyo.” } on Fin ni ga explode like a star,” Shaw said. y. Spokesmen who attended the Kawabe replied: “I deeply ap- merely to. return MacArthur's | “The process is no longer experi-
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. Denies Torture Knowledge : " In it, he "denied that he had : he is prepared for fighting,” the Quisling said in his defense preciate the many kindnesses you commands to the emperor. mental and will certainly be
prepared any coup against the 4. Disclaimed knowledge that the |document that he sent a long per-|SPokesman said. meetings said they were convinced | © 4 : | a government to soucide wh he gestapo had tortured Norwegians. [sonal telegram to Chamberlain av Gime 19 he Veasjour. ing Japanese were sincere and hon- oli shown us. 1 feel this att MM been 3 rm but also con-| cheapened; and at any moment S ) | Je y le § | : German ASO SH Se or 5. Sald his refusal to reprieve dures io pause in ue Aghiing expressed hope Panes SHV: est and were making every effort | Then the Japanese war lord are not poke SN heavier elements than uranium, "ARs e Polish ¢ ; { i stp v > vasion and demanded completé tHe death sentence given Police In- ie Polish rau jo Jo late untoward inciqgnts when the to Soopere with the Americans. strode out of the room. thing they can’t do.” as much more explosive than exoneration. spector Gunnar Eilifsen for patriot|q sted Britain in reliet work 1 Americans land .in Japan. ere was no discussion of inter The Japanese envoys boarded a| Allied interpreters at the meet- uranium as uranium is than gun Against British activity had saved many other Nor-| Russia after the last war wor b An All-American Show national iflaise or the causes’of the transport plane at Manila’s Nichols ing. he added. gained the impression Powder, may be discovered. wegians from execution. Quisling said he went G ow \ : war, Neither was the atomic bomb field this afternoon to take Mac-|that Hirohito “had far more control | “Finally, like the sorcerer’s ap“All asses give the dying lion its| "op d § nt to Germany e also desire no incidents,” discussed, other than a possible Arthur's mess lov i a i n . Charged that King Haakon |in 1939 and through Rosenberg-oh Aoihar 1s,” | age back to Hirohito.|over his people than we ever sup-| Prentice, we may practice our kick,” he told the court. “I demand |pq4 forfeited his right to the throne tained an i Hit] Bo Macs Hnps Sue of staff, Lt. Rich- | passing reference to bomb damage| They were expected to land in|posed.” > | magic without knowing how to i . y er. ar . e -1iB i : : tia ack rehabilitation and ideication bY going to Britain in 1940 because] “It ‘was the As, time that I met/ly rland told them blunt {8 Various Japanese cities. {Japan at 11:30 0. m. tonight 9:30] He said Japanese army and *navy; stop it, thus fulfilling the profor the insult and harm inflicted | ihe Norwegian constitution provided | Hitler, Quisling said, “but I lad| MacArthur's spok i | One Japanese officer in the party a. m. Indianapolis time), and motor| commanders were bowing ‘to the| phecy of Prospero. In View of upon me.” that ’ 8 sald, t a ur’s spokesman said no!had inspected Hiroshima after the|immediatbly to the imperial palace| 'S Sur , n at if the king remained out of the impression that he right away|furth t perial palace|emperor’s surrender order. | our behavior recently, I cannot He blamed Britain's mining of th { SS } Tig y| further conferences with the Jap-|first atomic bombing, but he ap-|for consultation with th er Th i | june country for more than six|took a strong personal liking to|anese were believed necessary be-|parently mad { Sp e Japanese emissaries showed, pretend to deprecate such a poss ssary 3 e no comment at the| <The Japanese delegates were un- no emotion when they read Mac-| sibility; but 1 think it worth
Norwegian waters for the. German | the at a time with ig » Tk od rm 2 : u % ’ , attack on Norway. Word of the Out permisstimne. fore MacArthur goes to yo. conference. derstood to have given full details Arthur's terms. They were here for| mentioning.”
British mining reached him April 8, 1940, and later that day, he said, “reports came through” that German transports were en route. The Germans landed April 9. Formation of a government that would work with the Germans not . only saved Norway from further Strauss Says:
destruction and death, he said, but
{ deterred Hitler from also invading Uy : Sweden. : Dp A «As far as the Germans other- ; 15
wise are concerned,” he said, “it is a fact that the werhmacht from the first was opposed to our forming a government and to our undertaking. They would have preferred a clear field of operations for themselves.” " Treason, Manslaughter He said he long had believed that Norway should make peace with Germany, but had been unable before the German invasion to win sufficient support in the government for his views. The former premier was charged specifically in the original indictment with treason, manslaughter, responsibility for the deaths of more than 100 Norwegians, defiance of Norway's constitution, collaboration with Germany and theft and embezzlement of millions of dollars in funds and property. A supplementary indictment read
at the opening of the trial by the WHAT! NO SOYBEANS! .
presiding justice, Erik Solem, asserted that Quisling was “willing . to let himself and his party prepare The Post War Plans in the the German invasion .. . and re- Textile Fi | . ceived advance financial aid for this : eld are clothed with project” from Germany. ‘startling possibilities
Civilian Judges jens In addition to the three supreme (probabilities).
court -justices, four civilian judges selected by lot sat on the bench in (We have come to learn that the judgment of Quisling. They were : sp. two barbers a plumber, a laborer scientists’ dream of today— and a chemical worker, with one an is the reality of tomorrow.) alternate. The trial convened in the former ; music chamber of a Masonic lodge We've read, even as you, reams about
hall at 10:01 a. m. (3:0) a. m. In- f b . d x dianapolis time). Two Norwegian abrics made of glass, and aluminum,
ttle dress sat behind golciers fa e dre and steel—about textures made of wood
More than 50 witnesses were fibers, and milk ey summoned, among them Gen. Otto ' and coal and air! Ruge, commander of the Norwe- ; i gian army at the timé of the Ger- But in examining the forerunners of
man invasion. Only 200 persons, o 3 all newsmen, diplomats or Nor- Suits that are already here for
wegian officials, were permitted in . . : the small courtroom. 1945-1946—inspecting the swatches,
Prosecutor Schjoedt asked Quis- and h . . Hng whether he had any private c ecking the commitments for the funds before the German inva- Fall and Winter (to soon pile in}—we
sion, . Had His Furniture desire to report that among the Suits
“I had very valuable furniture,” ® : Quisling 301d. = there will be none made of the . “Worth how much?” aforementioned elements (not even of “It depends on the special prices at that time. I estimate it was soybeans!}—But we can assure one and all ; SEE worth around 30,000 kroner e
Ot the wi fe i THERE WILL BE PLENTY OF SUITS OF GOOD (VERY GOOD) ALL-WOOL FABRICS
attempt to prove that for several years before the war there had 1 ¢ Jeuls heivfe the war. Quip Ded ies ah thorough excellence— office for foreign ‘political affairs styled in the tre i Sfice 12 Loin Boies y | nd of tomorrow. Priced He charged that Quisling gave very moderately. information on British propaganda in Norway to -the Germans and informed them of Norwegian defense works on the west coast. Quisling also asked Germany for financial backing for his Nasjonal Samling party, Schjoedt said. Rosenberg gave Quisling a special in-
troduction to Goering's office, which YN SER. ~ ALL OF WHICH is emphasized in a large fine company of suits
did the actual financing, the prose-|,
mem + : 1S PE new for Fall and Winter of 1945 and 1946 —
Quisling opened his defense ora- Pry 3 ti lowi ’ - SA . .* + . on following Schjoedt's summa ASS VEN expressing the notable, uncopyable distinction of the clothes — <
tion. Submitted as part of his formal defense was a long memoir
CAMCDEN ps ailored at Joh
~President Truman will send to ‘ 1 In & : SPndind Tums vi wd tof... For Vetorans of WORLD WA The Suits are in single and double breasted models — revealing a message proposing permanent gov- or Veterans of WORLD WAR | : ernment control over all phases of ~ There is a kinship in the veterans groups—bound atomic energy development, it was together by a kindred service to Uncle Sam—both / ' : . . ‘ EC aaron Thomas (D indicated by the: buttons as illustrated above— they ren the tempo of the season ahead. ~The selection (including Utalss. of the senate nilitaty affairs : insignia of honor of both wars. committee, said the measure was Presented with our compliments— now being prepared by the war de- . partment and that he probably : on the Third Floor.
would introduce it after the Presi- iY : dent's message’ Was received. Government Regulations require that
"Thomas declined to disclose spe- you show your Honorable Discharge Papers able groupin . : : hms gen 1s ai te w yo ge Papers grouping at $68. With others (from Fashion Park), at $50 to $75. “Whatever course the law takes ‘ : you may be sure of one thing. The discovery of the secret of releasing
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