Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 14 May 1940 — Page 5
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TUESDAY, MAY 14, 1940
- PACIFIC GREATEST U.S. DANGER SPOT
Administration Trend, as Shown by Recent Events,|
Is Away From Neutrality, Toward Naval Aid For Allies, if Needed.
By LUDWELL DENNY Times Special Writer
WASHINGTON, May 14.—The Administration trend is away from neutrality and toward diplomatic, financial and if necessary, naval aid to the Allies. Moral support for the Allies already has been proclaimed
Fowler, Bob Runciman, Virginia Rouse and Ruth Ho “kett. Joe Prout and Don Hudson.
Ist U. B. Church Will Hold | Marbles Sectional Today,
The First United Brethren Church the 10-foot ring, although in most | will hold its sectional marbles tour- cases this was solved by a little 8th nament playoff at 5 p. m. today by grade arithmetic.
| schedule.
special arrangement with the tour-| Forgetting about the arithmetic | nament committee. All other sec-|for the time being, just take piece tions will play Friday according to/of strong cord five feet long. Tie| one end around a nail and have] E. J. Rood, recreation director of | somebody hold the other end. Then, ! the church, said his section had $0 | stretching the string tight, draw a |
by President Roosevelt in his Pan-American address and his message to the King of the Belgians. —, In preparation for a virtual HULL A SKS U S financial alliance with the 1 Ut |Allies, feelers now are being put out for elimination of the 10 RE ON GUARD cash requirement of the Neutrality Law and for modification of the Johnson Act banning credits to de- | faulting war debt nations. Believes Security in Danger Discusses Flect Location Until ‘Lawlessness’ Is The question is whether to attempt this before Congress adConquered. journs, or in a short special session before the fall political camWASHINGTON, May 14 (U. P). “ : : aign is in full swing, or to ‘wait -This nation cannot be certain mage January wh r Session peace and security until totalitarian On ‘the naval e de however forces of “lawlessness and chaos”|. = ces States is go et. give way to international law and, in co-operation with the Aler Secretary of State Cordell lies much more closely than Js ull declared last night. He A {generally unaerstood by the public. Th Bn odie; Welle Sub . Lag | TRAE is why almost the entire ican Society of TN On lite, | American fleet is being kept in the hs Predites Yo aw rain, | Haali-Guam area of the Pacific, on Tdph —i oe oonin nave|rather than spread also along the priEey nations int 0 War > | Panama-Caribbean life-line. “The specter of a new descent] Se ee ie St Ng into the conditions of international |SUvates Heel In t Oo anarchy which characterized the | much greater value to the Allies todark ages looms on the horizon to- [Gay than an American expeditionday,” he said. “I am profoundly | &TY force in France. The major convinced that it menaces the civil-| Allied fleets must provide the blockized existence of mankind—of every |2de and protect the supply and re-| nation and of every indiviqual. inforcement lines in north EuroEvery nation and every individual|Pean waters, and hold the Meditershould be actively on guard. (ranean against a possible German “Our own nation—powerful as it| thrust. iis ids ts and determined as it is to remain | Therefore the Allies’ dire engageat peace, to preserve its cherished ments elsewhere are an invitation institutions and to promote the wel-| {0 Japanse conquest in the British, secure | French and Dutch empires of the against that menace. We cannot | Far East—unless the United States shut it out by attempting to isolate fleet is used to preserve the status and insulate ourselve. We cannot (quo in those strategic areas. be certain of safety and security F. D. R. Backs Up Warning when a large part of the world outside our borders is dominated by the| Hence, the importance of the forces of international lawlessness.” declaration by Secretary of State Summing up- the rise of the doc-| Cordell Hull on April 17 asserting trines of national economic self-|a8n American interest in preserva-| sufficiency and the breaking of in- [tion of the existing status of the ternational pledges, he said: {Dutch East Indies, and his repiti- | “Peaceful nations have been de-|tion of that warning to Japan last] prived of their independence by the Saturday following German in-| use of armed force or threat of|vasion of Holland. force, combined with the exercise of | In canceling the sailing of the fraud and treachery. Conquered | fleet from Hawaii to California, and | populations have been subjected to|ordering it to remain in the far] new refinements of oppression and Pacific, the President backs up the) cruelty, economic warfare on an un- Hull diplomatic warning with the]
precedented scale and unparalleled threat of force. in its intensity has come to domi-| Ihe Allies do not need American nate the foreign trade and other 'roops in France, but the Allies economic policies of many nations, desperately need the tin and rubcausing immense material losses to Per of the Dutch East Indies for all nations and a marked lowering |their own and for American war of the standard of living every- industries. where.” | Thus while’ American opinion, re- ————— —— membering 1917, has been watching the front door for signs of Ameri2 can involvement, the far greatest dancer is at our back door—the Pacific. The extent to which the Washington government is co-operating with the Allies is revealed bv the decision on the closely related problem of the Dutch West Indies. The danger of Hitler, with his hands full in Europe, being able to seize | those islands is not great; and cer- | tainly could have been prevented by protective temvorary occupation by the United States. That protection would have been in line with the Menroe Doctrine, but it would have prevented the Allies from using the rich oil supplies and getting a new strategic base. So the President ,in order to permit Britain and France to occupy those islands resorts to a new interpretation of the Monroe Doctrine, because it is with the consent of Holland and does not constitute a change in soverignty.
Hitler Notes Change
That convenient interpretation would fly and hit us in the face if Germany or Japan ever induced a Latin American government to invite similar protective occupation— not a future impossibility by any means. Already, of course, Hitler through his press has noted and challenged this new interpretation of the Monroe Doctrine, But the more immediate danger is that the Allies and President Roosevelt will apply & similar interpretation to the explosive Dutch East Indies. Would British-French occupation of the Dutch East Indies, with Holland's consent, change the status quo? According to the WashingtonWest Indies precedent, it would not, but according to the Japanese controlled press it would. This is typical of the unpredictable and dangerous conflicts which jeopardize the already seriously | strained American-Japanese relations as a result of the Roosevelt pro-Allied policy. While the American people in popular polls vote overwhelmingly | and hopefully against involvement, and Republican presidential aspi- | rants pledge that our defense shall | be limited to this hemisphere, the | United States is already involved in | war danger in the Pacific.
NUMBERS SPELL NAME
CASHTON, Wis, May 14 (U.P) — An auto thief would have a tough | time getting away with Ole Lee's car. He carries his name on his | license plates—legally t00, despite the rules against defacement. The numerals on his plates are 337-370. Turn the license upside down and there's his name.
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jump the touthament gun because|circle in the ground with the nail. of a heavy baseball schedule at the| There's your ring, the best that] end of the week. The playoff will|can be drawn, and if you dig the be held at the church play ground, | nail deep into the ground, the circle | 13th St. and Carrollton Ave. | line won't wear off. NO less than 28 boys are entered | At Brookside Park, the mibsters in the tourney. Mr. Rood said three | were shooting the agates all over rings will be necessary for the play. the lot. The North East Commu- | He will be assisted in directing the nity Center boys were showing | sectional by William Sinkhorn, Lee fancy talent, too. Brown and George Filer, In the First United Brethren! Meanwhile, the mibsters in 26 Church playoff, the word is around other sectionals were pitching theithat Gene Vaughn, who won an lag and knuckling down today as intra-church tournament several the tournament fever rose high weeks ago, would face stiff comand hot. petition this afternoon. At some of the community cen-| In addition to Gene, those en-| ters and school yards, there seemed tered in the playoff today are: to be some difficulty about making| Harold Lowe, Nils Parsons, Robert | Mathews, Robert Powers, Harold | Sturgeon, Donald Wilson, Claude | GOTTSCH ALK TELLS Sanders, Lewis Hodges, Lester Dant, | | Robert Martin, Stanley Shirley, Har- | {land Sturgeon, Charles Miller, Val | OF BOYS SCHOOL AlD |Dickman, Dick Green, John Glenn, {John Anderson. PLAINFIELD, Ind. May 14—In-| Gordon Hoffman, Richard Shu-| stead of depriving delinquent boys Mar, Arnold Ulery, Jack Willis, of normal enjoyments of life, the|Billy Robbins, Lucien Barrick, Rob- | Indiana Boys School seeks to make ert Barrick, Richard Alexander, up for previous shortcomings in|Harold La Fara and Albert Meyer. | their environment, Thurman A.| Gottschalk, supervisor of state institutions, told a group of judges and welfare workers here today. “We're all interested in preventing juvenile delinquency, but we want to do something more than that,” Mr. Gottschalk said. “We're trying to create good citizens, welladjusted members of society, happy personalities. If the community doesn't train the boy to be a good citizen, then he’s going to be a bad citizen.” Mr. Gottschalk spoke as a part] of the observance of “State Institutions Week.” Governor M. CIlifford Townsend spoke yesterday at the dedication of four new buildings at the Logansport State Hospital, built by the State and the WPA. ® See how Gibson's Freez'r Shelf solves the space ds of modern cooking! Full.-width Frees'r Shelf provides huge ice cube and frosen dessert capacfty in the Freezing Zone and vastly increases usable shelf area. Finer food, real economy, with 3-Zone Freez'r Shelf Gibson!
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Times Photo.
Hey Gang! Here he goes! Yt's Mister Joe Mel Cortner, 9, a 4B pupil at School 81 knuckling down to dust that ring off at Brookside Park. Watching him work out are (stooping, left to right) Charles (Pete) Standing (left to right) Dean Imel, Bill Bise,
STATE DENTISTS PLAN SESSIONS
Speakers Listed for Annual Convention Here May 20-22.
Dental authorities from the United States and Canada will lecture during the 83d annual convention and post graduate course of the Indiana State Dental Association at the Claypool Hotel May 20-22. Lecturers will include Dr. John Kemper, Ann Arbor, Mich; Dr. Clarence O. Simpson, St. Louis, Mo.; Dr. George Lang of the University of Alabama; Dr. Irvin S. Ante of Toronto, Ontario; Dr. Arthur Merritt of New York City, and Dr. John C. Braver of Iowa City, Towa. The convention will be opened with table clinics May 20 morning. Dr. Fred W. Leavell of New Castle will supervise, Dr. Rex ‘N. Douglas of Elkhart is executive committeeman in charge of the scientific program, and Dr. Roy D. Smiley, Washington, is master of exhibits. Dr. R. R. Gillis of Hammond will speak at the May 20 afternoon session on “Dentisry’s One Hundred Years.” Lecturers will include Dr. Glenn Pell and Dr. G. T. Gregory, both of Indianapolis, and Dr. N. G Wills, Connersville. Dr. B. K. Westfall, Indianapolis, will be installed as president at the annual business session May 21 in the afternoon and a president-elect will be chosen. Dr. R. C. Shur ot Valparaiso is president. That night the annual banquet will be held followed by talk on “What Are You Afraid Of?” by Charles M. Newcomb of Candler, N. C.
"PAGE 5
|New York market, informed quare
HOLLAND MAY SEEK [New vork marcet. HUGE LOAN IN U. S.' These sources say that the Neth-
, erlands is prepared to pledge as LONDON, May 14 (U. P).—The collateral vast amounts of tin, vernm . rubber and other East Indian coNetherlands Go BG ane |lonial products, in addition to its
ferred here because of the German | 1." x “now in hiding outside
invasion, soon may ask Permission .. y,)ang, as well as securities and of the United States Government hank deposits held in America by to float a big war loan jn the [Dutch nationals.
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