Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 3 August 1940 — Page 2

a

PAGE 2

Hoosiers in Washington—

COMPARES WILLKIE BOOM T0 WILDFIRE

Beeler of Evansville Says G. 0. P. to Sweep Entire State; McNutt Thanks Delegates by Mail; Landis Offers Voluntary Enlistment Bill. By DANIEL M. KIDNEY imes Staff Writer . - WASHINGTON, Aug. 3.—The Willkie boom is going] like wildfire in Indiana, according to Jerome D. Beeler of Evansville, who claims he was the first Hoosier G. O. P. convention delegate to publicly announce that he was going to Philadelphia to vote for Wendell L. Willkie. | A businessman and president of his local Chamber of

Commerce, Mr. Beeler is (or rather was) new to politics, but he learned fast—particularly the Indiana brand

For he has safelv tucked sawav all of the ballots cast bv the 28 he |

S0- !

Rep Boehne

lot, the bull-voiced be able to use that phrase and sa» Let's look at the record.” During his visit here, Mr. Beeler conferred with Rep. Charles A. Halleck of Rennselaer, close adviser to Mr. Willkie snd the man who

toric all - night Party Has Enough “Regunomniation. | denounce the of Public Opinion to the final bal- | wide test by the American Institute | of lar” party members at this time to

members of t e | Indiana delega-! | tion at that his- . { Gallup Poll Shows Neither | session which | finally resuited in Mr. Willkie's | . . lars’ to Win. Soe when and -so denies | By DR. GEORGE GALLUP that he did not! Director, American Institute Willkie cand i- PRINCETON, N. J. Aug. 3.—As | dacy and vote the American people enter another | against him UP peegigential campaign, a mbation- | Mr. Beeler will | old Al Smith Public Opinion indicates that! neither the Democrats nor the Re- | publicans possess sufficient “regucapture the Presidency. Whichever party wins the elec-| tion next November will

INDEPENDENTS § RULE BALLOT

tions as the make-believe trench mortar at left.

THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

National Guardsmen to Train—But With What?

i, Ma i ae

a

Because the National Guard doesn’t have the real weapons, guardsmen have to use such contrapEn gineer H. Bartlaes and Private John Lynch are as-

sembling it. The regular Army grabs all the really m odern equipment, such as the trench mortar shown

at right.

President Roosevelt has asked authority to call up the National Guard. Many wnits of the guard are participating m the big nation-wide August war ames. What does the guard have to work with? Here is a survey disclosing the state of preparedness of this vital arm of the nation's defense,

WHEN MOST of the 240.000 men of the Na-

tional Guard assemble this month for the Army maneuvers in New York, Louisiana. Washington,

{ Minnesota and Wisconsin, they are going to need

a liveiy sense of imagination, and lots of it. Because the regular Army has first call on all equipment, the guardsmen will have to roll across country in paper tanks, dream up their air forces, simulate mechanized units and otherwise play war with obsolete weapons. The shortage of guard material is as serious as that.

made the galleries cheer and the delegates boo in placing the Elwood man’s name in nomination Rep. Halleck said he was ven pleased at the reports which Mi Beeler brought and agrees with the Evansville men that the Willkie nomination will mean a resounding victory for the entire Republican ticket in Indiana in November. Mr. Beeler makes one ‘exception right in his own city, however. He predicts the re-election of Rep John W. Boehne Jr. a conservative Democrat who has risen to membership on the important tax subcommittee of the Ways and Means Committee Rep. Boehne long has enjoyed bipartisan support, particularly among the businessmen and industrialists in Evansville

McHale Visits McNutt

Frank M. McHzsle, hational committeeman diana. also made an over-night visit here this week. He said he was in New York City business and came around this way to see Federal Security Administrator Paul V McNutt The windup of the McNutt-for-President campaign included sending a letter of thanks to every Chicago convention delegate and also to every contributor of more than £10 to the McNutt campaign, he re-

ported Since Mr

{ Democratic from In-

on

a

McNutt was barred by President Roosevelt's selection of Secretary of Agriculture Wallace from taking the Vice Presidency, Mr McHale advised that he not take the Democratic national chairmanship, either. He refused to share Mr. Beeler's enthusiasm over the Willkie boom in Indiana but was frank to admit that “favorite son” strength will be a potent factor the November result “Of course, I predict Democrats will win was quick to add.

in

that the Mr. McHale

Ludlow Is Realistic |

As a member of the Appropriations Committee, Rep. Louis Ludlow of Indianapolis took the floor to call attention to the need of being realistic about the costs involved in the five billion dollar additional defense measure which was promptly passed He praised the National Defense Advisory Commission and said he places the utmost confidence in the proper expenditure of this money under the direction of such capable businessmen ss William S. Knudsen and Bdward R. Stettinius

Landis Has Own Plan

Rep. Gerald W. Landis (R. Ind), who announced he will not support conscription, introduced his bill this week to encourage volunteer Army enlistments It provides for one year enlistments with the lowest base pay for either the Army or Marine Corps as $30 per month

Guffey Needed No Help

Senator Sherman Minton Ind.) stuck close to his seat Thursday when Senator Joseph Guffey (D. Penn.) read a prepared speech defending the third term against the charge that it violates tradition The Indiana Senator, who is able in debate, expected to have to take up the cudgels as Majority Whip if Senator Guffey was challenged from the floor But the Pennsylvania New Dealer talked on with hardly anyone on the floor paving any attention to him and when he was through the other Senators changed the subject

LABOR PEACE IN DEFENSE WORK

WASHINGTON. Aug. 3 (U Representatives of the rival Con-

and American Federation of Labor

own |

D.!

Py.

i

dependent vote.’ the survey reveals.

Both Mr. Roosevelt and Mr. Will- | will |

kie have indicated that they appeal to the independents, and since the size of this group shifts from time to time the American Institute will measure sentiment on

the question throughout the cam- |

paign. At the present time, Institute survey shows, in every five considers himself free of regular partv allegiance. Voters in a cross-section of the 48 states were asked: “In politics do you consider vourself a Democrat, Republican, Socialist or Independent?” The answers were.

the latest

Democrats Republican Independent Socialist or other Only one voter in every 25 477) failed to list himself in one of the above categories. As previous Institute shown, the great majority of those who consider themselves Independents voted for Mr. Roosevelt in 1936 How they will decide to vote this fall is a question of the greatest importance to both major parties. On the basis of | voting population of 60.000.000, the survey points to a bloc of independent voters throughout the United States numbering 12.000.000. Sectionally, moreover, the largest number of them are distributed throughout the crucial states of the East and Middlewest. Independent voters play the smallest part the survey shows, in the 13 states of the Democratic South:

tests

Percent Regarding Selves as Independents New England 30 Mid-Atlantic 3 East Central West Central South West

Of equal importance from the point of view of party strategy is the fact that more than 6,000,000 of these independent voters — or about half of them — sre to be found today in the income group which earns between $20 and $40 a week Every Institute measurement in the last four vears has indicated that this is the income group which may do most to decide the next election.

JULIETTA INFIRMARY 1S GIVEN ‘CLEAN BILL

Except for the suggestion that =a re hazard be removed and that the bookkeeping be modernized, the Marion County Infirmary at Julietta received a clean bill of health

vesterday from the Indiana State | Department of Public Welfare.

The report commented favorably on general sanitary conditions, medical care, food preparations, occupational therapy programs and upkeep of infirmary farms, buildings and equipment. It was recommended that an old grain and tool building next to the main infirmary building be removed so as to minimize fire hazard, and that the records on patients be expanded and modernized. Resident ‘population on the date of inspection was 457 men and 120 women.

sougnt Ocience Explains How Dye Causes Some Skin Troubles

: Indianapolis persons who may gress of Industrial Organizations have heard various rumors of “nylon | patients.

poisoning” will be interested in

probably | owe its victory to the so-called “In- |

The President has asked authority to call out four National Guard infantry divisions, seven antiaircraft regiments and four or five harbor defense and mobile tractor-drawn artillery regiments. | is a tremendous drain on existing facilities of a guard which now numbers 242.300 officers and men.

This

does not consider any boost under the proposed draft. So ¢he National Guard will have to shoulder the old Springfields or maybe a few broomsticks. The same holds true for other infantry weapons, particularly the automatic rifles, heavy machine guns and mortars. Infantry weapons are not so difficult to produce as the Garand rifie and production is being stepped up. It is certain, however, that the guard

units training this vear and next will not have new *

and modern weapons. Nor will the “mobile” Take the shortage in tanks. The “square” infantry division, still being used in the guard instead of the triangular setup in the Army, calls for one company of light tanks, 24 in all. Since the Army possesses only 297 light tanks, including those used in the World War and obsolescent tanks in dead storage, it is apparent the guard cannot hope for cven a full company. The new tanks will not be produced in quantity until next spring under present schedule; there is no question that these will be added at once to the

guard be very mobile.

The photo above shows another synthetic imple ment of war to be used by the guardsmen

SATURDAY, AUG. 3, 1940

at Platts-

burg. Gunner James Wingo is shown getting instructions on a “machine gun” from Corporal A. C. Rosen-

berg.

The regular Army is now being equipped with the very superior split-trail 75 mm. guns, which means that for the present the guard will have to use the old model. The rate at which both the 75 mm. guns and the 155 mm. howitzers are being manufacjured under the new national defense program precludes any new artillery for the guard this year.

Speed-up of production is slated for spring, but by that time growth of the regular Army will call for the new guns as fast as they are turned out.

THERE IS A serious shortage in the 37 mm. anti-tank guns which are now being delivered to the Army in small quantities. Under the new “triangular” setup there will be 18 anti-tank guns .to a division. This compares with 72 in the German division, 32 in the Ttalian and 48 in the French. Thus, the guard cannot possibly hope for equipment in a weapon in which the Army itself is deficient.

The same is true of anti-aircraft equipment. The President wants to call up seven National Guard anti-aircraft regiments. A year ago we had onlv 11. Four units were added in November and six mo this spring, bringing the total to 21 regiments. Th anti-aircraft strength in the guard was doubled i. a year. But in this doubling the strain on equipment was increased. Equipment of an anti-aircraft unit is extremely expensive, difficult to build. Up to last year, when a sizable order of 3-inch guns was built, it took 18 months to produce & complete gun.

While this time has been redyced, it still is one of the most critical items of supply to the entire

one voter |

have |

First major deficiency is the Garand rifle. Only 50.000 have been built so far and the Army has taken these. Even if production of this semi-auto-matic weapon were stepped up, it would take at | least two vears more to supply the regular Army. This estimate, moreover, is based on the present {| authorized size of the regular Army, 375.000, and

Army’s newly “Panzer” type fig

In the artil ciencies, both cri howitzers,

ROBOT ADDS TO | Today's War Moves

| Announcement

BOMB ACCURACY

Permits Plane to ‘Lay Egos’ In Desired Numbers and At Intervals.

ire

sphere. . Dakar is the first French colonia

{pass into Germany's possession af{ter the war, Hitler would possess the best strategic base along the entire East Atlantic Seaboard for —A yobot ‘striking at the Western Hemisphere : } t i iv wives through ‘the West Indies. p omatically gives bombardier that id He v8 Dakar harbor can accommodate a series of electrical impulses SO the largest ships. It is a naval that a bombing plane can lay its station of condeadly eggs in any desired number siderable size and at regular intervals, has just with a dryvdock been granted U. S. Patent 2,209,380 BI Rive h Ri by the Patent Office. The inventor enlarged ‘withis Ralph L. Bell, of Raspeburg, Md. out aifficulty. Tt He has assigned the rights to the also ds ng ly Glenn L. Martin Co. of Baltimore, port iieally sit. = : < i o eT ag principal builders of uated For Srunsns : t i R= The bombs are in racks from Be hd which they are released ‘electrically, We ee either by pressing & button, or from > an a bomb sight so arranged that the, ued electric impulse is given when at pying a

lly ali with the target. . commanding poJ | Te ih oo, it is a sition between Western Europe and | |sible to start the series either with [De territories abutting the Gulf of | la button or from the bomb sight. Mexico. : : | | | Dakar is directly opposite Mar- | Bombs Are Spaced | tinique, making the port the nearThen the bombs are dropped, in St base for a naval and air offen-

: 2 ./ sive against the West Indies any v desir be n ually 4 . any desired number, and at equal, European power could possess. The spaced points along the

ground. gistance of 2500 miles could be The machine automatically takes crossed by an air armada ‘in eight into account the ground speed of the hours at present and within the airplane. The entire device is con- near future perhaps five to six hours | nected by means of plugs, so it can as airplane speed increases. easily be removed from one plane If operations against the United | me used fn Wife. lished | States ever were attempted on a 1e control is accomplished bY 2 imajor scale by =a trans-Atlantic motor. This is connected to a dial enemy, establishment of an impreg- | Sit Delete the HEIs hetween (nable base in the West Indies wouid | ombs, on a series of CONCENtric pe x prime objective of the enemy. | Suess Sune We different, Martinique could serve as an admirFE eS re x Se the aviator ,phje advance landing place as one | I at ue Sy BF ius of the short island steps leading to » : gS S, ON ‘puerto Rico and Cuba. the correct circle, the intervals at a nogtile force entrenched in the {Which he wants his bombs dropped. yest Indies would be in a position

Then he sets another dial to the, operate submarines lurking in number of bon bs in the train, and spe concealed coastal waters, while |

the machine does the rest. A third ine Gulf of Mexico is too confined to dial indicetes the number of bombs hermit large-scale operations by & |

remaining in the rack. defending fleet. To capture New

Judges Plane's Speed { Another device useful in ly S CALLS LOANS | 641 RN | mber | N ELEVATOR CORN | 0 ably now is in use by the Germans. | Loans on 1937 and 1938 corn a is on fan. io oad. of | Stored in elevators and warehouses | ng, from the ground, the speed of| - : an approaching plane, so that the Will not be extended beyond their fire of anti-aircraft batteries can be maturity date, Aug. 1, L. M. Vogler, |

adjusted. The height of the plane charman of the Indiana Agricul- |

above the ground must be de- i : - termined with other methods. As it Surdl Conservation Conmmigies Wn

comes toward the observer, he sights hounced yesterday. through the device, and counts, in| Owners of the corn which is so

SCiunidis, je time it takes the plane cored under the A. A. A. commodity | 0 SS pr y { tonal a id aa loan program may pay off the loan the altitude, then, opposite the time by Monday. Notes are held at the | measured, is shown the plane's gpffice of the Commodity Credit! ySpueq. Corp, 164 W. Jackson Blvd. Chicago, and payment of the orginal | loan, interest and storage charges | may be made there directly, Mr. Vogler said that warehouse | and elevator operators have asked |

that the corn be moved to make |

brand caused the trouble to his room for small grains now being | harvested in this area, Farm-stored | {corn is not affected and farmers]

|

Sey

| By Science | WASHINGTON, Aug. 3

Mr. Mason

{warfare is included in the {patents granted this week. Nu 2,209,485 went to Josef Tichy, of) Brno, Czechoslovakia. Assigned to a Czechoslovak corporation, it prob- |

| Science Service pointed out, how-

were called together today in an ef- Jearning that scientific studies have ever, in its dispatch today that dyes | have until Sept. 1 to decide what |

fort to achieve harmony on Work fixed the blame on the dve or finish |in

affecting the national defense program.

used in making the stockings.

| The forthcoming issue of the trouble long before the days of nySidney Hillman, former C. I. O. Journal of the American Medical lon hose. In many of.the cases. the official, now in charge of the Na-| Association will carry the report of persons afflicted were tional Defense Commission's labor Dr. S. J. Fansburg of Newark, N. J..| hypersensitive to the particular

hosiery and other articles of|gissolution they will make of it. wearing apparel have caused skin| “The corporation will acquire title to all warehouse-stored not redeemed by Tuesday and will cancel apparently | the producers’ obligations,” Mr. | dye Vogler said. “Most of the corn thus

supply division, appointed two men who investigated four cases of an|which did not cause trouble in other |goquired wil be made available to |

from each group to iron out diffi- itching skin eruption following the cases.

culties. He designated Van A. Bittner of

1. O. and President H W. Brown of the International Association of Machinists and President George O.

of North America to act for the A. F. of F.

wearing of nylon hose.

It appears from Dr. Fansburg's the United Mine Workers and Pres- studies, Science Service reported to- about similar skin eruptions result-| jdent Emil Rieve of the Textile day, that it was not the nylon yarn ing from the use of nylon hosiery, | Workers Union to represent the C. but the dye of finish that caused but whether any actual cases have,

the eruption.

Nylon yarn is made by the du|nitely. the stockings Lynch of the Pattern Makers League from this yarn are made by various Dr. Fans|burg's report does not state which

Pont Company but

hosry manufacturers.

.

the Federal Surplus Commodities | Corp. for export.”

City-Wide defii-|

BRANCHES

Fletcher Trust Co.

I Viewber Fodeat Deposit Lnsuraace Corporation [Jif

i

Various, unconfirmed rumors have | been circulated in Indianapolis |

occurred here is not know

The Fansburg studies may lead to changes in the dyeing or finish- | ing procedures used by the various | manufacturers.

announced corps, Uncle Sam's first fighting with paper tanks or using trucks with signs on them as at the Plattsburg maneuvers last year.

the second

By J. W. T. MASON United Press War Expert

| that German technicians have arrived at Dakar, | {capital of French West Africa, invites the interpretation that their visit | may be associated with reports of Nazi ambitions in the Western Hemi- |

to German investigation since France's capitulation.

Army.

hting force. That leaves the guard

arm there are two defiOne is in modern guns and is in ammunition.

lery tical. cannon have been built.

or will shortly be let.

But much more serious is the shortage of the two newly authorized weapons of the anti-aircraft regiment—the 37 mm. and the 90 mm. guns. few, an estimated 5 to 15, of the 37 mm. rapid-fire Orders for 1400 have been

Only a

This gun, which replaces the machine gun for fire against low-flying aircraft, can also be used for anti-tank work. But the National Guard won't use it for a long time—not until all the recular regiments have been supplied. Instead, the guard will use the officially discarded .30 and .50-caliber machine guns. As for the 90 mm. anti-aircraft guns, the guard won't even be able to look at one. These are the weapons which have been proved most effective against big bombers. The U. S. has 300 “on order” —but none for the guard At the same time the guard is deficient in observation, the only type assigned to it. The guard has 21 air corps observation squadrons. Most planes are fairly new, but obsolete in terms of actual combat conditions. The rapid expansion of the regular Army air corps practically rules out any new planes for the guard before spring Finally, the guardsmen may do a bit of shivering

| this winter under the unprecedented demands of the

national defense program. In ordinary conditions, it would be a problem feeding and clothing 50 to 60 thousand guardsmen. Sufficient uniforms are on hand toc take care of that number. If 400,000 draitees are outfitted this fall at the same time, the clothing problem may become something else again. The guard would be quite sure to sufler a shortage of heavy winter outfitting. Likewise, the guard may be crowded out of its regular barracks with the new deluge of recruits. And, like the guardsmen in 1917-18, they will have to do the pioneering, building camps of their own The War Department lists some 73000 separate items of equipment vital to the soldier. Of 252 items are designated ‘‘critical.” It is in these critical items the guard faces its greatest deficiencies. The guard will do practically all its training with old and obsolete weapons—or with none at all. There is no fun ahead for the guard.

these,

REICH COVETS

Plans Expansion at End of War Despite U. S. Orl s would be tl fine 1 | Tor Ed Cartel Proposal.

Indies, the ultimate intent being to| BERLIN Aug. 3 (U. P) drive northward along the Mississip-| ~ . pi River. If the enemy were able to! formed German economic sources occupy Canada a corresponding! said today that Germany was plandrive southward would be tempted with the aim of uniting the northern and southern thrusts to cut America in two, with the ends. . Mississippi as the dividing line. | It was admitted that the British To divide the defending forces of 'pjockade had halted German trade & belligerent is always one of the ie d that there fundamental strategic aims of an with the Americas a Vw : Army acting on the offensive. was little likelihood of resuming a

1 center known to have opened itself If Dakar were to

—In-

|Especially would this plan be es-| trade drive in Latin America until of hostilities in Eu-|

sential if there were any possibility after cessation of success in invading a country as rope. large as the United States. Secon-| No immediate countgr-blast to dary operations along the Atlantic| last week's Havana Conference was Coast might be attempted at the considered possible. But German

|same time, but domination. of the| economic quarters said that after

Mississippi would be the prime ob- the war, Germany should have no jective of the assailants. [difficulty in developing South During the War of 1812—the only | American markets despite plans time the United States has been | made at Havana for a Pan-Ameri-seriously invaded—this same strat- can trade cartel During the years egy was followed. The early land before the war broke out, it was battles of that conflict were fought in GChio as the enemy sought to move westward. The last battle economy. was fought at New Orleans. | Germany supplied machinery and Any future attempt to wage war manufactured goods in growing against the .United States on own soil would certainly follow the this main strategy of the War of 1812,| South American if the enemy believed it had a half filled orders. chance of success. The only way| German economists said that the enemy's high command could | German firms recently have replan a possible victory, based on ceived many inquiries from South severing the United States, would| America as to when deliveries will rest en the initial seizure of the be resumed. The sources expressed West Indies. belief that South Americans themIf any enemy were allowed to! selves are anxious to resume this select its own trans-Atlantic port!|trade as soon as the British blockfor such a venture, it would doubt-| ade is lifted.

less choose Dakar above all others. {mesenteric Dakar would become a menace to 2 GIRLS FROM HERE TO TAKE NUNS’ VOWS

Western Hemisphere security beTwo Indianapolis girls and three

yond any doubt if it were in the | hands of a powerful military nation | from the state are in a class of 16 to be invested as Sisters of St.

unfriendly to the United States and | ambitious to expand its power on| Francis in ceremonies at Oldenburg, Ind. Aug. 12.

this side of the Atlantic. They are Misses Mary Catherine

GREENTOWN AWAITS ANNUAL ‘HAPPY DAY’ Eschenbach and Alma M. Paetz of | Indianapolis; Misses Rosemary

It will be reunion time for hun- | 1 a mping and Rita Marie Werner of dreds of former Greentown resi-| Oldenburg, and Miss Emma Streit dents Aug. 18 at the park there. of North Vernon. " Miss Eschenbach is the daughter They call it the annual “happy of Mr. and Mrs. Carl Eschenbach, day” and oldtime Greentown resi-|1023 E. Raymond St, and Miss dents join with former town and | Faetz is the sister of Sister Anna

° ._| Clare, a teacher in St. Mary's eastern Howard County residents in| academy. Their father is George renewing acquaintanceships.

'Paetz, 5246 Pleasant Run Parkway. SHOP IN COMFORT,

an important role in German

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trade

Entire Store Air-Conditioned

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pointed out, Latin America played |

its amounts and the war, which ended |

|

CHICAGO, Aug. went out today.

in the elephant

blue and pink

For Nancy, 19,

an elephant, too. It will calf born

in the

weeks after birth. invitation storks carrying a

Nancy Awaits 175-Pound Baby

invitations for a shower for Nancy The party will be held Aug. 11 Brookfield Zoo. The dainty babyinvitations addressed to all the elephants in all the zoos in the nation. first-born in a month or more, is

be the fourth elephant

The other three died within a few

AUTHOR JOINS M'NARY WASHINGTON, Aug. 3 (U. P.) — | Forrest Davis, author and news- | paperman, was appointed today an | assistant in charge of research to 3 (U. P.) —The |Senator Charles L. McNary, Republican nominee for the Vice Pres{idency. Mr. Davis served as a re{search assistant to Senator Robert A. Taft of Ohio in his campaign for {the Republican Presidential nomination.

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ELMER DAVIS S

expecting her

United States.

depicted four |® baby elephant

in a sling, followed by four more |

“reserves.”

A hint of other

at the zoo appeared in a corner. | A picture of a giraffe standing |

beside a cradle “Me too, later.”

(The baby is expected to weigh about 175 pounds.)

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