Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 18 October 1939 — Page 4
Loses Suit
Fe | NEW GAS MASKS
Test Follows Assertion That Present Protection Is
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_.Study Shows Creel Methods “Still Are Applicable if U. S. Enters War.
By LUDWELL DENNY * Times Special Writer . ;: WASHINGTON, Oct. 18.—Much of our thinking about this war is ‘Poisoned—not only by German and Allied propaganda but by lies fed
us in the last war Byjour own Government. This is Jnade clear by James Mock and Cedric Larson in
their new study of the Creel Com-
mittee on Public Information, ‘‘Words That Won the War.” By substituting the word Nazi for Hun "and Hitler for Kaiser, Wash - ington - officials now perfecting the Industrial Mobilization Rian 2m sol Be much of their Mz. Penny materials fresh out of the C. P. 1. archives. Commenting on the propaganda administration now being planned here just in case, the authors point te
“4. “As the war. to end. war recedes “into the past, America’s fighting ‘men turn back to the C. P. I. Im‘provements on the Creel Committee would undoubtedly be made, but <if another war should come to this “gountry, no American would need ‘to read the story of the C. P. I. He ~would relive it.”
Dictates to Mind Seen
x The chief change, according to ‘the authors who praise Creel for ll the liberalism possible under the
‘gircumstances, probably would be a “worse dictatorship of the American mind. But the C. P. I. did pretty
‘well along that line.
-i For “by and large the American people today hold the articles of “faith which the C. P. 1.” fed them How fa-
‘more than 20 years ago. “miliar these “facts” are today:
“A people’s war—a holy war of
ideas.” .
¢ “Conscription. is more democratic :than voluntary service, but Liberty Loans are more democratic than
-faxation.”
‘i “The Allies observe international unrestricted submarine warfare was adopted because of - Ger-
war,
‘man liking for Schrecklichkeit.”.
; “Germany alone conducts propa-
ganda against our neutrality.”
“~ England and France are commit-
‘ted to America’s program.”
Mrs. Jayne Shadduck Topping of Honolulu, divorced wife of Henry J. Topping Jr; tin-plate heir, said today she would appeal the verdict of a Mineola, N. Y., jury awarding a $5000 verdict against her in faver of Frank Cordova, Hempstead, N. Y., aviator. Mr. Cordova had sued for $5513 which he said represented aviation lessons given Mrs. Topping and for $350 which he loaned her during the course of the instruction. debts.
GUARD WILL GET
Mrs. Topping denied the
ADDED TRAINING
War Office Authorizes Extra Days in Field for Hoosier Troops.
An additional seven days of field training for the Indiana National Guard has been authorized by the War Department, Adjt. Gen. Elmer Straub announced today. The extra days will bring to 22 the number for active training before Jan. 31, 1940. Adjt. Gen. Straub said that the extra period would be used one or two days at a time, possibly on week-ends or over a holiday. Ft. Harrison, rifle ranges at Frankfort, Salem and Evansville, as well as State properties not yet designated as parks will be available as training grounds. The new order will affect 5443 enlisted men and 391 officers. Adjt.
Inadequate.
A new type gas mask, designed to protect firemen from smoke and heat as well as industrial gases, will be demonstrated to Safety Board members Friday at Fire Station 30, South and New Jersey Sts. The demonstration was ordered by the Board yesterday, following Fire Chief Fred C. Kennedy's assertion that the masks now used by firemen are no protection against smoke and heat. It was a combination of heavy smoke fumes and extreme heat, the Chief said, which | overcame one fireman and injured 10 others during a downtown fire Saturday night. The new masks; developed by th Mine Safety Appliance Co., Pittsburgh, are priced from $160 to $265, Chief Kennedy said, and will give protection from 30 minutes to two hours, depending on the type of mask used. i A ‘demand that firemen be protected with smoke-proof masks was made by City Councilman Walter Hemphill Monday night. Dr. Hemp-
hill asserted that the present masks are “inadequate.”
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Gen. Straub said that extra pay will be given for the additional training.
os Authors Not Shocked
. The authors are not shocked by ‘their material. They long since Jearned that the first necessity in ‘waging a war for democracy is to ‘destroy all freedom at home. In “such a national emergency there Is no place for the Constitutional Bill of Rights or any civil liberties. hey show that “voluntary censorship” of the press can be absolute, and what happens to the few who «dare break the goose-step. :~ When war comes even Congress ~must. march under dictatorship. Typical is the 1938 May Bill, which ‘the minority report described as “Congressional hara-kiri.” . The authors quote this comment from the House hearings on that bill: “This section empowers the Presjdent to license and completely :eontrol all forms of human life and endeavor and to fix the terms, at his own whim, on which he will grant ‘licenses. It makes one exception— a legislative bribe to newspapers, riodicals and books, which shall be exempt. But newspapers are subject to every other provision—regis‘tration, draft, and hedged around in such a way as easily to eliminate ‘the freedom of the press.”
Peace Was Lost
--- Although several have written of the C. P. I. before, notably Harold = ¥ | ; | Leather sole! Sup--D. Lasswell and Mr. Creel himself, : : 5 | porting counter! ‘the present authors are first having : zex: B10. 11. :gccess to all the 180 cubic feet of .American war propaganda recently ‘transferred to the new National Archives Building in Washington: ..- The net seems to be that this propaganda was believed not only by Americans but also finally by Germans, as intendéd; that it ‘Helped win the war but lost the
peace. BRITISH LIVING COSTS “UP TENTH IN 2 WEEKS "~ LONDON, Oct. 18 (U. P.) —Living CAREFULLY BREWED : costs in England have increased 10 THOROUGHLY AGED - AOAOREEARAASEO A A : Por cent since Sept, 30, the Labor The HUDEPOML BREWING CO., 40 §. McMicken Ave., CINCINNATI, O. : ry ;
‘Ministry reported today. x Pte odes. figure on Sept. 1. was Marion County Beverage Dist., Ine. \_ 529 W. Court St. - Phone RI. 5396 J
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