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The Courier-Journal from Louisville, Kentucky • Page 7

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Louisville, Kentucky
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II COURIER-JOURNAL, LOyiSVILLE, KY MONDAY MORNING, NOVEMBER 13, 1944. Long German Columns Withdraw From Metz Hitler Asks Almighty To Stand By Germany Wm sfkKjS -m nil I fix y. rWAt. I fW s' S' s'''''1') I I III I I I I II she is fighting with all the heroism of a people of true heroes." Opinions differ on the infer ences of his next remarks, for he noted that "betrayals" were numerous following the breakthrough by the Russians against the Romanian front on the Don River in 1942. But despite these unhoped for contributions to the Russian successes the hopes of the German adversaries were not realized and "we reformed our fronts to hold the enemy." Foes 'Play Last Trump.

Germany's enemies realizing this, then played iheir final trump, the Fuehrer went on the "stab in the back" of last July. "The eternal enemies of the Reich who supported this coup," he continued, "were right in one thing, however, for as long as I am alive Germany will not suffer the fate of other European nations now submerged in Bolshevism. As long as I live my body and my soul will be animated- by one ideal to make my people strong in the defensive while they prepare to storm the onrushing danger when they renew the offensive and I shall spare neither health nor life itself in doing my duty as the leading German. southern end of the 450-mH front followed up a German wlth-rirnwul foicnl by flooding of th lnwhtiul.i. The American drew up along the Mtieitlie Hiver and pressed to within two miles of St.

Die, in the entrance to one of the passes through the Vosges to the Rhine. These forces seized Herbaville, two miles northwest of St. Die, La Fosse, three miles southwest, and cleaned all but scattered unit? from the Forests of Mortagne and De Champ screening St. Die cn the west. Snows Tie t'p French.

They also took the villages of Etival and Pajaille on the Muer-the River six miles northwest cf St. Die and Le Vivier. The French First Army in th Vosges Mountains farther south was tied up by heavy rains and snow. Strong aerial support was given the attacking Third Army. Fighter-bombers of the Ninpteer.ih Tactical Air Command claimed the destruction of twenty tanks and ninety-one other ehiccs.

Ten of the tanks were knocked out in the counterattacking force on the Moselle north of Metz. The six infantry and two armored divisions now joined the battle brought their count of prisoners yesterday 1o 3.625. AP Wirephota from Signal Carp. "COVER GIRL" Jinx Falkeriberg, clearly expresses her feelings as she Rets her third tetanus shot at an A.T.C. training base in India before she rejoins her U.S.O.

troupe to fly over the Himalaya "Hump' to entertain American troops based in China. Churchill Asks French Back De Gaulle Fully Continued from First Pace also came up in the talks, the French have notified the Allies that they would like to contribute military units to the war against Japan but no arrangements to this end have yet been mr.de by the combined chiefs of staffs. Roosevelt's Stand Expfained. In Syria the French would like a removal of the British minister, General Spiers, and hope that the British will back up their interpretation of the promise of independence to Syria and Lebanon; which is, that it requires action on the mandate and treaty with those countries. Though not directly represented, the United States and Russia played parts in these Franco-British talks.

It is understood that Churchill tried to remove General de Gaulle's misapprehensions about President Roosevelt and to explain the American delay in recognizing the de Gaulle Government and inviting it into the Allied councils, and it was understood that his effort has had some success. Paris Papers Paris newspapers, which normally appear with two pages each and do not publish Monday, were nllolted an additional ration of rnrce paper so they could publish four pages each, both today and tomorrow, in order to do justice to Armistice Day, Churchill's visit and France's entry into the concert of Allied powers. They filled their four pages today with pictures, descriptions and comment which emphasized that France now stood on a footing of equality with Britain, the United States and Russia, that Britain and France were reunited after the breakdown of their alliance in 1940, that the site of the 1940 armistice in the Forest of Comniegne was now "purified" by the symbolic fire which was lighted by a torch carried from the flame above the unknown soldier's tomb beneath the Arc de Triomphe in Paris. Humanite Skips Tictures. The Communist paper lluman-ite used its extra paper ration chiefly to describe the popular armistice demonstration that followed the official one.

Though all the other papers spread over their first pages photographs of Churchill and General de Gulle at the armistice ceremony, Humanite published none. It mentioned Churchill and General de Gaulle at the bottom of its first page and published a short article about their presence at the bottom of the second page. Caprrlght. 1944. Version Of B-29 Tested Continued from First Pate our stnfcsle against the death of our people, both on the fighting front and behind it, since neither is surpassed in the domain of heroism." Emphasizing Germany's mission as savior of European civilization a role he by context vowed he would never cede to any nation Hitler went on to contrast Germany's aims in a war "imposed on her by a cruel world," with those of the Allies.

Says Fight Is for Freedom. The Germans, he said, were fighting for the safeguarding of their national independence and to assure their future, while the Allies, doubtless inspired by Judaic Bolshevism, thought but cne end the annihilation of the German people, its extermination and through that extermination its absolute ends. Bolshevism, inspired by the democracies, has sought the destruction of the National Socialist movement and the extermination of the people of the Reich," he went on, adding that the democracies ought to recognize this fact and act accordingly. To 'their detriment they did not and he nevertheless "once again" felt urged to appeal to them to conserve their solidarity and unite in a common defensive front against the menace of Bolshevism from the east. Forbids Surrender.

Turning to the Allies "futile hopes of German capitulation, the Fuehrer once again proclaimed that any capitulation for Germany is out of the question. For even in the best of circumstances "it would only lead to the handing over of national leaders under the guise of war criminals and the extermination of their people." Hitler went on to review the status of Germany's present allies and her former "friends." "In times like these," he said, "peoples of Europe demand other 1 3 41 i -3 bid descendants of outworn dy- nasties though (Italy capitu- lation) had for a while been mili tarily serious I am glad to note that elements of resistance rose against the symptoms of decadency and united around the leader of a new state, Benito Mussolini. In Hungary the same happened around the person of Ference Szalasi, Slovakia's Tiso and Croatia's Ante Pavelic," he declared. Says Japan Knew Stakes. But "our great ally, Japan, from the very first day of this struggle saw the values at stake were the very existence or disappearance of her nation.

Today G.ISs In China Indorse Pat O'Brien's Troupe A U. S. B-29 Base In West China, Nov. 11 (Delayed) (AP) The feud is over so far as American super-bomber jockeys are concerned. The enlisted men of the 20th Bomber Command among the bitterest critics of previous troupes accused of listless Continued from First Page sfven miles from Saarbrucken itself.

For some reason the big guns of the forts ringing Metz had yet to open up on the American columns fighting five miles to the south and even nearer on the north, possibly because the gunners are without aerial observation to direct their fire. The German communique intimated that something big was afoot for to the north in eastern Holland facing the Ruhr Valley, reporting "continuous enemy movements" in the Nijmegen and Helmond areas and "heavy attacks by planes." An Associated Press front dispatch confirmed the German nervousness over this front, saying that the enemy was patrolling aggressively in an attempt to gather information and was shelling Allied troops in their water-soaked foxholes. Seventh Army Gains. To the south on the First Army front, doughboys cleaned out more pillboxes near the bomb-smashed town of Schmidt southeast of Aachen under heavy enemy mortar and machine-gun fire. The U.

S. Seventh Army on the Tokyo Broadcast Includes Russia In Aggressor List New York, Nov. 12 (JP) The Tokyo radio tonight replied obliquely to Marshal Stalin's characterization of Japan on November 6 as an "aggressor nation" by including Rtissia among aggressor powers in a broadcast commentary on "What Is the As- gressor?" The Japanese broadcast, reported by C.B.S., charged that "all western nations Britain, America, France, The Netherlands, Portugal, Spain and Russia were guilty of aggression in the most heartless form two or three centuries ago," and that in modern times among "flagrant cases" of aggression were "the Soviet-Polish war, the Mesopotamian, Nica-raguan and Cuban incidents." Kilgore Resigns Pidtlic Relations Insurance Posts Ben Kilgore, 176 N. Peterson, former managing director of the Kentucky Farm Bureau Federation, yesterday announced he had submitted his resignation as public relations director of the Mutual Benefit Health Accident Association and the United Benefit Life Insurance Company. Kilgore, unsuccessful candidate for Governor in the last Democratic primary, said the resignation is retroactive to October 15.

He said there was no further announcement as to his immediate plans. CORNS AND CALLOUSES Takrn off ao rasilr with Wi-Ki-Wi Corn and Callnua Plantrr. Von will be plrad with the mult. But It and IfT It. "CALL IT WALK A WAT." 25C BY MAIL ANYWHERE 23c V.

C. WATHEN nn n. tth St. I.aulavlllo, Kr. LONGER banking They carried out their full schedule at advanced Superfortresses bases despite a knee injury suf- Vinson Likely To Take Over Byrnes' Post Continued from First Page Taylor.

Dr. Witte also is a public member of the board. Byrnes has been Roosevelt's policy-steerer and conflict-settler among the emergency war and demobilization agencies. It is understood, however, that the new "assistant President" will not take over the Byrnes' offices in the White House but will occupy space in a downtown office where members of Byrnes' staff notably Bernard Baruch and John M. Hancock performed their official chores.

Roosevelt is expected to send to the Senate also appointments of at least two of the three members of the Surplus Property Board created by Congress to succeed William L. Clayton's Surplus War Property Administration. The names of Sam H. Husbands, president of the Defense Plant Corporation, and Lt. Col.

Joseph P. Woodlock, executive assistant to Clayton, have been mentioned. Clayton is leaving in the belief the new surplus disposal machinery is "unworkable." James Shepherd, Los Angeles attorney, has been mentioned as a possibility for the third membership on the board. Yanks Advance 3 Miles In Push Totvard Ormoc Some Nazi Innovations Prove Indispensable to Foresees Success, "If in these circumstances I speak but rarely to the German people," the Fuehrer concluded, "the sole reason is that I am ab- sorbed by the duties which have devolved upon me and which must be fulfilled if we are to force destiny. I do not doubt for an instant either my determination to do this nor the fidelity of my German people.

Neither do I doubt for a second that we will surmount with success our forthcoming difficulties as the hour approaches when the Almighty will send among us his blessing as He has done for so long in the past." Copyright. 1944. L-OnclOll Believes Hitler May Be 111, Mad Or Dead London, Nov. 12 UP) The conviction grew tonight in informed quarters here that Adolf Hitler is incapacited at least and that Heinrich Himmler has succeeded him as No. 1 man in Germany.

When the Nazis today issued a proclamation in Hitler's name and Himmler, not Hitler, broadcast it to the nation these observers found confirmation of their suspicions that the Fuehrer is ill, mad or dead and that his henchmen are trading on his name and prestige with the German people. the F.C.C., said the attack was made by "an undisclosed number of enemy warships" Saturday night and was preceded by a day light raid by about twenty B-Z4 Liberator bombers. "Damage caused to our side was extremely slight, lokyo said. All Guns' Open Fire. A Berlin broadcast of a Tokyo dispatch recorded by the United Press said that the warships opened fire "from all guns" and that the bombardment was pre ceded by an air attack by B-29 Superfortresses which hit Iwo in two waves.

Admiral Chester W. Nimitz an nounced Saturday at Pearl Har bor that Army and Navy planes had bombed Iwo on Thursday and Friday (Japanese time) but made no mention at that time of any Saturday attacks. Iwo, one of the main defense bastions guarding the approaches to Japan, is an 8-square-mile island also known as Naka Iwo and Sulphur Island. It is 770 miles south of Tokyo and has three airfields Moto, Minami and Suribachi which have been a frequent target for American warplanes. McGuire Adds 28th Jap To His String of Kills An Advanced Fighter Base, Leyte, Nov.

12 Pi Maj. Thomas B. McGuire, the second highest-scoring fighter ace in the southwest Pacific, scored his 27th and 28th kills today, when he shot down two Japaese Navy fighter bombers near Cebu. The Ridgewood, N. ace is beginning to crowd America's ace of aces, Maj.

Richard I. Bong of Poplar, who has 36 notches in his aerial guns. Allied Raid On Shanghai Reported By Nazis New York, Nov. 12 (INS) The Nazi Transocean Agency reported that an Allied air raid had been made today on Shanghai. The dispatch, recorded by the F.O.C., said that "for four hours Allied aircraft hovered over the city, dropping bombs on the suburbs." performances and avoiding non-coms have prepared a testimonial scroll of appreciation after a U.S.O.

troupe headed by film star Pat O'Brien came, showed and conquered. "That gang nearly knocked themselves out trying to put on a real show," said one Winnetka, 111., crewman who helped draw up the testimonial. "When a bunch of regulars such as these appear, they deserve bouquets just as those who fouled up got knocks." Gunfire Punctuated Shows. O'Brien's troupe included starlet Jinx Falkenberg, a former model; singer Ruthie Carroll, dancer Betsy Yeaton, singer and guitarist Jimmy Dodd and Harry Brown, the troupe manager and pianist. Brown is the father of Lt.

Tom Brown, former Hollywood actor now serving overseas. O'Brien's troupe put on shows punctuated by the sound of gunfire from the Kweilin front before the group's arrival at this base. setting up centralized municipal governments for the great cities of Belgium. His crime in their eyes was collaboration with the enemy although the scheme he favored was one that was steadily gaining in popularity before the war. Reorganized Communes.

The Germans reorganized local communes, corresponding to the boroughs of New York City, because the burgomasters exerted too great control over the people. It will be a delicate matter to distinguish Borginon's alleged collaboration from a simple wish to improve the efficiency of City government in Belgium. As it is the Nazi blueprint for administration has been retained in Brussels until spring. The strictly German institution, the Secours d' Hiver, is another example. It was started by Hitler Chevrolet's New Home To Be Ready In March The new quarters of the Broadway Chevrolet Company under construction on the north side of Broadway between 7th and 8lh will be completed and ready for operation about March 1, Almond Cooke, manager, announced yesterday.

Approximately a hundred cars can be serviced each day at the new 1 -story service garage. The company, now temporarily at Brook and Broadway, vacated former quarters at 12th and Broadway in June. 200-Year-Old Violin Stolen. A 200-year-old violin valued at $200 was taken from the home of Miss Betty Lou Hodges, 4626 W. Broadway, sometime during the past week, she reported to police yesterday.

She said she had last seen the violin on November 5 when she placed it in a closet. Man Lost In Fog Injured In Fall Into Creek Here Robert Sumrall, 52, Prentice, was admitted to General Hospital at 9 a.m. yesterday with a possible fracture of the left leg, an elbow injury and shock after he fell twenty feet to the cement bed of Beargrass Creek at Breckinridge. Firemen, called by passers-by who heard the man's moans, raised Sumrall to safety after tying him to a ladder. Sumrall, who said he was employed on a pipe-line construction job at Lebanon, told police he fell when he lost his way in a fog.

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Quick phono service You may borrow at I Ioti-rlold to pay old debts, taxes, doctor bill, make repairs, help relatives for almost ar.y purpose. Visit Household Finance today. Or if you need cash in a hurry phone your application we can have your loan ready when you come in. NEED The payment Include all cola If payment in mad mnnUuv on III aam da jr ot each aorcau-ivu rmmlh. r-arlter or larrvr payment rertuca th tmil iliatfra ami later ir amaller IMVinrnla inrrraa litem.

1 13-aiiot a IMBr.I la tli luonihjy rat of A nit that part tA balance ml rx-crreliriK SllJU, and 2' i on that p.irt lmlara'Cinereof flOi. It lirtiterl tin actml un.axi ptiiu it' ll Iik1.uk a redta etl iy I tw-re are no line. itmi oiinia or other liKlnVaj lli.ill" 9 A.M. TO 9 P.M. MONDAYS 9 A.M.

TO 4 P.M. WEEK DAYS fered by O'Brien while playing softball atiKunming. Freezing weather, which made it no picnic for scantily clad girl troupers in their outdoor performances, also proved no hindrance. Brought Cheer, Good Will. Excerpts from the scroll presented to O'Brien said, "Now we have seen both sides the good and the bad.

We hollered when it was bad. It is fine to give credit where credit is due and it is overdue to Pat O'Brien, Jinx Falkenberg and their troupe. They did not expect the impossible a Roxy stage, cozy theater and soft lights "This was a theater in the real sense, without the fixings, but for true entertainment. You people at home should know the cheer and good will this troupe broiight from home to us here in China." In Belgium Country long before the war to provide winter relief. Name Is Changed.

Secours d' Hiver is functioning today under the title of Comite National de Secours. A campaign to do nwny with it entirely is being waged by the leftist press but the chances are that the machinery will remain in service because it meets an essential need of the public. One of the first acts of the Government on returning from London was to uproot the German Corporation National de l'Agri-culture et de l'Alimentation charged with the distribution of food on the ground that its payroll of 12,000 was riddled with collaborators. of its leaders the corporation is operating once more as a joint Government board with the blessing of S.H.A.E.F. C'oprrif ht.

1944. Charles Ochsncr9 Retired Farmer, Dies At Age of 86 Charles Ochsner, 86, a retired farmer, died at 1 p.m. Sunday at his home on the Shel-byville Road. Ochsner, who operated a truck farm in the St. Matthews area for many years, had been ill several months.

Survivors are four sons, Charles E. Ochsner, Irvin Ochsner, Adam W. Ochsner and Albert W. Ochsner; five daughters, Mrs. A.

J. Wieber, Mrs. William Herdt, Mrs. Raymond Boss, Mrs. Carl Yantz and Mrs.

Bartley Williams; a brother, Frank Ochsner; nineteen grandchildren and seven greatgrandchildren. Funeral services will be held at 8:30 a.m. Wednes day at the residence and at 9 a m. at Holy Trinity Catholic Church. Burial will be in Cave Hill Ceme tery.

1307 BARDSTOWN RD. HI 5816 Formerly Major Taylor' Mat your order and we will have 9 A.M. TO NOON SATURDAYS w. market MEMBER F.D.I.C. Many Restored With New Names By DAVID ANDERSON Br WlrelMi to The New York Timet and The Courier-Journal.

Brussels, Nov. 12. The Belgians are embarrassed at having to admit that some things done by the Germans in their country had merit during the occupation and are indispensable even now. The work of erasing all trace of the enemy was so thorough in the early days of liberation that the authorities today are occupied with the distasteful task of restoring Nazi creations, often disguised under new names. In the past week the Senate voted to withdraw parliamentary immunity from Henri Borginon because he was instrumental in Boy to Enter His Plea Today In Fatal Shooting Robert Littrell, 16, son of Mrs.

Besie Hopkins, 815 Swan, charged with manslaughter in the shooting of William Carver, 15, son of Mr. and Mrs. L. A. Carver, 212 E.

Woodbine, will be arraigned in Juvenile Court today. Carver, a clarinet player in the du Pont Manual Training High School Band, was shot before the Manual-Ashland football game. Funeral services for Carver will be held at 1:30 p.m. Wednesday at Schildt's Chapel and at 2 p.m. at the 4th Avenue Methodist Church.

Burial will be in Rest-haven Memorial Park. Nephew of McKrllar Dies. Philadelphia, Nov. 12 7P Robert McKellar, 53, assistant director of the Corporation Finance Division of the Securities and Exchange Commission, died today. He was a nephew of Senator Kenneth McKellar of Tennessee.

Continued from First Page 1 mountains in and around the Ormoc corridor would be difficult. The huge map at press headquarters looks like a Christmas tree, with blue pins dotting the various ridges which battle has engulfed. Most of them are south and east of Pinamopoan an expanse of hills where there are no towns or villages. Planes Hammer Ormoc. Heavy land-based American aircraft, striking from rear bases, hit flaming Ormoc with sixty-two tons of bombs, "causing extensive destruction." Enemy "harassing air attacks" have increased slightly, the communique reported, and eleven Japanese planes were destroyed by U.

S. fighters and antiaircraft fire. Mount Catabaran, where the 24th Division was fighting, is almost five miles south of Carigara Bay and approximately two miles east of the Pinamopoan-Ormoc highway. Cavalrymen Spread Out. Elements of the 1st Cavalry Division are meeting "increasing resistance" in the Mount Pina saddle, to the southeast of the road.

The cavalrymen has spread out across rugged ridges, to protect the flanks of the main American column punching down the twisting Ormoc road. In the Twenty-fourth Corps sector, in the center of Leyte Island, Americans were closing from both the east and the south, moving against Japanese hill positions and enemy remnants which fled to the mountains after the Yank thrust through central Leyte Valley, near the island's east coast. Jap Report IT. Warships Shell Iland Close to Japan Washington, Nov. 12 (U.R) Tokyo reported tonight that a fleet of United States warships, in a bold strike within 770 miles of the Japanese mainland, bombarded the air-base island of Iwo in the Volcano Islands on Saturday night (Japanese time).

The report was not confirmed by Allied sources but if true it was believed that the American warships had ventured closer to Japan than ever before to deliver a surface bombardment. Tokyo, in a broadcast heard by CEO lELD FRO UflB HID raro flit? As Transport Washington, Nov. 14 A military transport version of the B-29, with the speed, range and high-altitude performance of the Superfortress, is undergoing tests. it was disclosed today by the Boeing Aircraft Company. The plane closely resembles the combat B-29, using the same wing of 141-foot spread.

The fuselage is twelve leot longer and the gross weight 10,000 pounds more than the Superfortress. The plane can carry 100 passengers in three cabins, two on an upper and one on a lower deck, with remaining space used for cargo and baggage, or as an all-cargo craft can handle a maximum load of 35,000 pounds. 2 Railroad Men Injured In Blast; 3d Hurt In Fall Three railroad employes were under treatment yesterday at SS. Mary and Elizabeth Hospital for injuries received in two accidents. Axel Nyberg, 58, of 410 N.

28th, Louisville Nashville Railroad mechanic, was burned on both legs when an acetylene torch exploded at the L. N. shops, 1st and Central. Another employe, George Martin, 28. of 303 Lowa, suffered burns on the hands when he attempted to help Nyberg.

A foreman with the Southern Railway, Joseph H. Allen, 59, of 214 W. Avery, suffered a wrenched knee and lacerations when he was thrown from a handcar on which he was riding on 14th ned. Hill. French Name Envoy to Canada.

Ottawa, Nov. 12 lfi) Count Jean Marie Francois de Haute-clocque has been named the first French Ambassador to Canada, French Provisional Government officials announced here tonight. Louisvillian At Medical Meeting. Dr. A.

David Willmoth is in St. Louis this week attending the Southern Medical Association meeting. POULTRY CO. 114 W. JEFFERSON WA 1264-1265 it ready when you calM I SIGNATURE FOR MEN AND WOMEN WITH JOBS No endorsers needed Repay in small monthly instalments YOU run short of cash, let House hold rinance loan service hclo you.

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