Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 12 August 1940 — Page 2

THE INDIANA of Invasion—How

VOLUNTEER CIVILIANS READ w TO COMBAT PARACHUTE TROOPS. * . OR OTHER LANDING FORCES INVADING BRITAIN'S INTERIOR

ADIN INTERIOR | 7: Ta SKS

CAMBRIDGE , §

&

was said, even if it to assure that food

PAGE 2 eee & Tanne Spokesman, American or Y | 4 or other neutr i i utral Disease and Death Certain today. Britain will reply that she cannot unless aid was dispatched to them Representatives of United States|ium and France where food short- | certain areas of the continent are tions are being ground between the Distribution Commission, said in Great Britain from overseas supHe reiterated his appeal at Col-|Belgium, return to the United States Germany wished to distribute the they recall an Ambassador because would be consumed velhiciv > > exclusively by the victims of Ger-| Mr. Hoover listed figures showing fl use of the Germans. |sume most of the domestic produc-

LONDON, Aug. 12 (U. P.). —Great Britain will reject| relief organizations can ship | hl ’ Unless *Millstones’ Are The Government so far has not | Herbert Hoover warned here late received concrete proposals regard- vesterday that civilian populations permit any exceptions to the block- at.once. ade even if assurances are given! Mr. Hoover, here to confer with | relief organizations and the Inter- ages already were rapidly develop- | national Red Cross were said toling. facing famine during the coming millstones of the food blockade, winter Great Britain and Germany against West Yellowstone, Mont., Saturday plies.” night that his organization was ne- | Raps Reprimand to Cudahy Orade Springs yesterday.) [for consultation, Mr, Hoover said: I'he British view, as stated by| “It is impossible to understand ay allable stocks of the conquered he states a fact.” COUNLIES Mr. Cudahy was reprimanded by man Invasion, such stocks inevit- the high percentage of imports o hiv Y ] Teas er Av’ i i ly would increase Germany's the European countries and added: | {tion and the cities mostly live on the imports. |

ie Sar ill | i: 8 8 Let Germans C | en Nations, Says London any proposal that she lift her! HOOVER CLAIMS blockade of Europe so that| en | food to the citizens of nations! conquered by Germany, an| Removed, He Says. authoritative spokes aid | ¢ Spokes S ' bokesman said| coLoRADO SPRINGS, Colo, | (Aug. 12 (U. P) —Former President] ing food shipments to Belgium, the 1 European countries would face] Netherlands, Luxembourg, France| Wholesale starvation, death and and Norway, but if they are made | that the supplies will be distributed Wendell Willkie, the Republican | exclusively to the population of the Presidential nominee, said that he invaded countries referred to Norway, Holland, Bel- | have discussed the situation with| ‘The situation is obvious,” the British authorities, it was learned. former President said in a lengthy because of spreading reports that prepared statement. “These na-| Germany Would Benefit each other. (Former President Herbert Hoo-| 1hey are blockaded by Germany ver, head of the European Food from continental supplies and by gotiating with Britain and Germany| In an obvious reference to PresiIn an effort to supply food to “18.- dent Roosevelt's request that John 000,000 persons facing starvation.” Cudahy, American Ambassador to authotiiative quarters, is that such what the Administration in Wash- | Prive ons which may develop onlington means by statements that the continent could be remedied if [they do not have any facts or why A n ray we oreuvel Mt the State Department Friday i enille his report in London wrIvtions food conditions. rabacr'y for waging war by releas-| «The situation will be even more ne a corresponding quantity of acute than these figures imply be-| lomestically produced food for the cause the farmers and villagers con- | “The native production degener- | ates during war by inability to im- | port feed for animals.” |

Doubt Famine Reports It was believed here that accounts of imminent, widespread famine,! including the assertion by John Cudahy, American Ambassador to Belgium, that 8,000,000 Belgians are facing starvation, are exaggerated. | But it was pointed out that even if the reports were true, the shortace could be made up by the distribution of German food reserves German sources repeatedly have said were ample. and by fa.ilitating food transport bv rail and! n the occupied areas instead

of reserving transportation facili- MANY agreed to: ties for war purposes { 1. Take none of the domestic pro-

Although it was doubted that {he duce of the civilian populations of | food blockade would prove to be a the conquered countries. vital factor in winning the war | = Furnish an equivalent of any | British pointed out that so food already taken. | as the war is prolonged. the 3. Permit imports from Russia Germans would be increasingly and the Balkan States. forced to submit to strict rationing. |

Outlines 5-Point Plan Mr. Hoover said he believed that | if the small nations were allowed to keep their accumulated stocks of food and their present harvest the situation would not become acute until some time in the fall. The former President said that starvation could be averted if Ger-

which

canal |

sources

ong

4. Allow free passage of ships without attack. 5. Permit adequate control of dis-

| VanNuys and Others [tribution by the organization so as Ask Caution on Plan to enable it to be certain that those

WASHINGTON guarantees are carried out. ym STON; Aug. 12 (U He referred to a “neutral, non—Congressional leaders said last governmental organization as was night that they sympathize with

) the case in the first World War.” efforts now under way to provide

relief for millions of persons in lands conquered by

ii yv Germany, but warned that this aid must not be allowed to lighten the burden of

PD)

Adolf Hitler { Senator Edward R. Burke (D.| Neb.) said he was “heartily in favor | of this effort,” but, added that there must “absolute assurance that this food will not go to Germany or make it any easier for Hitler.” Senator Frederick VanNuyvs (D Ind.) doubted that Great Britain would consent to relax her block-

CHICAGO, Aug. 12 (U.P.)— Fletcher Dobyns, Pasadena, Cal, attorney and author, last night blamed | a group of the nation’s “most pow- | erful multimillionaires” for the death of prohibition. | He spoke before an estimated 2000

be

disease” during the coming winter |’

tafter 2 a.

* COASTAL DEFENSE ZONE]: | EXTENDS 5 TO 20 MILES [=< BACK_FROM BEACHES

PD am HASTINGS Hla DUNGEN EASTBOURNE |

\

POLIS TIMES oes

Hitler's Planes May Look

N

JUNKERS SKY TRANSPORTS AND FREIGHTERS, AND POSSIBLY TANK.CARRYING AIRPLANES, TO FOLLOW DIVE BOMBERS, PARACHUTISTS INTO BRITAIN, LANDING MEN, SUPPLIES TO ESTABLISH BASES ON COAST FOR TROOPS CROSSING CHANNEL BY BOAT

Thy KOA, AT i RR » N = of = 25. Cleat UL vps = CONCENTRATIONS Se Mo TROOPS, TANKS, PLANES |: - - ;

OF

=-1 : IAT 4 = ms

~

“vi, WN ARMENTERES *“-.

Zo 7 B «112

BRITAIN'S RESISTANCE: HER FLEET, HER AIR FORCE, HER COASTAL GUNS AND ANTI-AIRCRAFT BATTERIES. FLEET TO ROMBARD NAZI POSITIONS | ON FRENCH COAST AND BOAT TROOPS AX] CROSSING CHANNEL, UNLESS DRIVEN (\| BACK BY GERMAN PLANES, U.BOATS Nii iii ae —

=

Preview of history's greatest invasion, mapped above in conjecture, sh ows how Adolf Hitler may pit his land and air forces against Britain's | persons went back to work in June

home defense. Already going on is Nazi bombing of

12

AVENUE CAFE

AN FRANCISCO, Aug.

Robinson Jr., Kentucky kidnaper, to

Shot Fired as One Patron Flees; Officers Menaced [Court of A Is. | By Unruly Crowd. Sn ring 4 life term for |

abducting Mrs. Henry Stoll of Kentucky in 1934 and taking her into

challenged today in a brief filed by

Indiana Ave, was on the loose again early yesterday. A policeman suffered a broken hand in a raid on a tavern and the riot squad had to be called to disdisperse a crowd which surrounded raiding officers One of 12 men arrested fled while the raid was In progress and a police pistol barkea three times as an officer tried to halt him The raid was

in an apartment at 28th and Meri-

lease was arranged by the Rev. E. Arnold Clegg, her brother-in-law and pastor of Capitol Avenue Meth-' odist Church at Indianapolis.

Ask License Revocation | A hearing on a police complaint that the taverns liquor license FOR INDIANA REA should be revoked as the result of . a raid Sunday. July 14, was held] Times Special today before John Noonan, secre-| WASHINGTON, Aug. 12.—A $285,tary of the State Alcoholic Bev-iggg allotment for “self-help” was SN odmmap, any Lowell H. announced today for the SoutheastSuspicions Are Aroused {ern Indiana Rural Electric MemberThe evidence taken today will be ship Corp., Osgood, by the Rural presented to the Commission Aug. Electrification Administration. 20. | REA officials explained that the Trials of the cases resulting from” ov will be expended for building | last night's raid were continued power lines where the work of clear- | until Aug. 30 by Judge Pro Tem. ing the right-of-way, erecting poles | Fioyd R. Mannon in Municipal j= stringing lines will be done by | oot, : members of the co-operative. When Sergt. John Sullivan and| The members also will use the Patrolman George Liese approached money to pay for wiring installathe tavern in their car shortly {jons and electrical equipment, m. a man sitting in front | which they will need in order to use of the tavern leaped from his chair | aleetricity when it becomes availand dashed inside. {able. That aroused the suspicion of the The $285,000 will build 376 miles officers. They followed him’ inside of line to serve 1166 members in |

|

land found three men sitting at a Franklin, Jennings, Ohio, Switzer- |

table, filled whisky glasses in front |jand, Jefferson and Dearborn Coun-

5 7? “eons ~ ABBEVI

be freed from Alcatraz Prison, was charge because

[the Government in the U. 8. Circuit

Indiana, where he held her prisoner officer.

dian Sts., Indianapolis, until her re- son had been held insane prior to

In his petition for writ of habeas court

re ue oun G00 B00 ALLOTTED | Hub Cap Spoils

ade to make possible the distribution of phe food. He said the blockade was one of Britain's most potent weapons in her war with Germany and to “ease up on it now would please Hitler verv much. A member of the Foreign Relations Committee, Mr. VanNuys said any such plan

should be approached

the national Temperance Union. that the

vention of Christian

charged

He

multimillionaires |

decided in 1926 that they could shift |

their income tax burden ‘to wages and salaries of the people” by reinstating the iiquor traffic with attending heavy taxes on it.

the | | the

delegates to the 66th annual con- | Of them.

Women’s |

The sergeant left his fellow of-

oe

ficer in charge of the prisoners and | U. S. DRUG ADDICTS

stepped outside for a moment, Crowd Becomes Unruly As he did, a patron overturned | table, smashed in the tavern

door and dashed up the avenue.

| Sergt. Sullivan fired at him three

times, but he failed to stop. The

LOWEST SINCE ’'14

WASHINGTON, Aug. 12 (U. P.).

—The Federal Bureau of Narcotics

| “These men took control of the | Association against the Prohibition of the House Foreign Affairs Com- Amendment and launched a nationmittee. said “Hoover is right and wide campaign for the repeal of the s0 are 130.000000 other Americans! amendment.” he said. who would like to help those poor | He said that “the public debauchpeople.” but he feared that any food ery and demoralization today are sent to aid victims of the Nazi more appalling than they were a blitzkrieg would find its way into |generation ago,” and called for *toGermany. : [tal warfare” in a campaign to ob“Hitler stole everything in Nor- tain new national prohibition legisway and Denmark.” he said. “There lation. is no reason to believe he wouldn’t| Dr. Charles Clayton Morrison, take any food we might send over » | Chicago, editor of the Christian State Department officials said Century, told an afternoon session tonight that this Government has hat “conscription in peacetime is not been asked bv France. as was incompatible with the pacific way reported last week, to make rep- of life to which the United States

resentations to the British Govern- Is dedicated.” ment in the interest of easing the! blockade, and has taken no steps in this direction. In other quarters, it was indi-| cated that this Government would| pps MOINES. Iowa Aug. 12 (U have no objections to Hoover's pro-'p, _ Norman Thomas, Socialist posal, provided it was acceptable residential nominee, told a state to Britain and sufficient assurances convention of his party yesterday were received that CO ; food ships would not be molested. to defend our country than we need |

ee = {conscription to supply Des Moines NAZI AGENT WESTRICK with police and firemen.” He said a conscript army might HIDES NEW ADDRESS lead to fascism in the United States and that “if we had as large an NEW YORK. Aug. 12 (U. P).— army as army leaders want we] Dr. Gerhard Alois Westrick, coun- would have been at war either with | selor to the German Embassy in Germany or Japan or both before Washington, whose activities had this.” been given considerable publicity; “I am more afraid of Hitlerism recently, has left New York for an without a Hitler in America than undisclosed destination, it was/1 am of a Hitler, because fascism learned today. comes from the failure of democDr. Westrick, whose driver's and acy,” he said. automobile registration licenses |® were revoked because he gave false] information in his application for| them, requested officials at his hotel not to divulge -his new address. Those inquiring” for him were referred to the German Embassy in Washington.

“cautiously.” Chairman Sol Bloom (D. N. Y))

DRAFT BILL ASSAILED | BY NORMAN THOMAS

the proposed that “we no more need conscription |

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| tavern.

lacing them and becoming unruly. |

lof the tavern. | were charged with

| ing time.

{U. P.).—Lake Mead behind Boulder | {body of Lieut. Laurence E. Wern- some businesses and injured others, |

into the water during a delivery somewhat unusual profession of ex-| (flight

fleeing man was halted in W jreporicd aay that a addiction Michigan St. by two other officers in the United States in 1939 was in a cruiser and returned to the at the lowest point since enactment | Patrolman Liese’s right of the Harrison narcotic law in 1914. hand was broken in attempting to, Efforts of the bureau to eliminate prevent the overturning of the addiction, it said, have been aided table. by illegal drug peddlers who have While the officers were awaiting | adulterated their goods and thereby for the patrol wagon, a crowd provided “involuntary cure” in some | gathered outside the tavern, men- instances. The average peddler, the bureau |reported, dilutes his drugs 91 per [cent and some cases have been found where the dilution was 99 per cent. :

Five in the crowd were arrested. Police said that George Graham, 507 Indiana Ave., was the operator | He : e ; Birt thers | There were not more than 50,000 1935 Beverage Act by selling or | 2ddicts in the United States last | drinking liquor after the 16 al Clos< [year, the bureau said, a “substantial | 8 | reduction” from the figures obtained | in previous surveys. re st WAR KILLS EXPLORATION

SALT LAKE CITY, Utah, Aug. 12 Dam was dragged today {or the|—The European war has helped |

FLIER'S BODY SOUGHT

BOULDER CITY, Nev. Aug. 12.

berg, whose Army plane crashed but it's practically closed out the

from a California factory |ploration. So says Lincoln Ellsworth, | to Kelly Field, Tex. at least, a recent Salt Lake visitor, |

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England's east coast towns, the prelude to' invasion.

"C. RAIDER HURT IN |Kidnaper Robinson Asks for HOPKINS RITES Release From Alcatraz Cell AT DARTMOUTH

(U. corpus filed here, Robinson contends | {P.). — The plea of Thomas Henry that he was not legally competent]

plea of guilty to the he previously had been judged insane by Tennessee] state courts. Furthermore, Robinson claimed, he was not a free agent at the time he pleaded, inasmuch as he was | shackled to the wrist of a Federal

to enter a

In Vermont.

The Government conceded Robin-

2 » | lege, Crawfbrdsville, Ind, the kidnaping, but contended the] e, Cra ile d Federal Court of Kentucky which] sentenced him was not bound by the

findings of the Tennessee state

tomorrow,

N. H

lege. Burial lot at

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Safety Record KANSAS CITY, Mo., Aug. 12 (U, | [amil P.).—Lee Phelps, 41, ti ations’ Fe elp 1, the nation ‘Deans Represent

third safest truck driver, today Wabash at Funeral

was anything but happy. He was arrested on a charge of reckless driving that brought to an end his | Times Special record of nearly 19 years without CRAWFORDSVILLE, Ind, an accident. 109 + A rap Phelps’ right rear hub cap ]12—Dean George V clipped the left front fender ‘of a car driven by Leo Simpson, 39. The two men got out to argue about it, and police decided they could settle the argument in Mu- | nicipal Court. Phelps had driven 450,000 miles without an accident, and was in |

| Louis B. Hopkins.

|old vesterday.

his record, his company was eXxpected

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MONDAY, AUG. 12, 1940 | |

U.S. WON'T FORCE ARMY-NAVY NEEDS

' Delays Demand for Priority of Defense Orders, Asking

Industry to Give ‘Voluntary Co-operation To End Delays.’

WASHINGTON, Aug. 12 (U. P.).—The National Defense Commission reported today that there is “no present need” to compel private industry to give priority to Government defense contracts as long as there is “complete | veluntary co-operation” to prevent delays. Defense “speed-up” legislation enacted June 28 provides

# 3 = invoked at the President's A. F. L. WARNS

Secrere=

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To Be Tomorrow; Burial

HANOVER, N. H., Aug. 12 (U.P. .|approaches the prosperity peak of | —Funeral services for Dr. Louis B. Hopkins, president of Wabash Colwill be «aid, placed profits during the first held at Dartmouth College Chapel six months of 1940 at 59 per cent A native of Hopkinton, he died Saturday night, on the eve of his 50th birthday while 49 per cent. | visiting his brother, President Er- | | nest M. Hopkins of Dartmouth Col-|

Hopkins

Aug.

Kendall and |ijona) weli-being.” [Dean Byron K. Trippet left today to| The Federal Reserve Board re- | represent Wabash College at the ported a ‘sharp increasee” in | funeral services of its president, Dr. dustrial activity in July with a 10-

Dr. Hopkins, president of Wabash [that registered in April. Gains were [Red Cross’ emergency projec | since 1926, would have been 59 years made in iron, steel, textile and | Britain's wounded.

Dr. Hopkins came to Wabash from third place in a national safety | Northwestern University where he rating for interstate truck drivers. |had been director of personnel. Be-| The accident not only cost Phelps |fore entering the field of education | |in 1922, Dr. Hopkins had been asso- and organizations today boosted the donors to to dock his month’s pay ciated with a number of business Marion County Red Cross war re- in this country in event of a na"lief fund to $73,548.82.

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| & Unemploment Drops | T4e survey estimated that 374,000

lard that

has asked Robert P. Patterson and WASHINGTON, Aug. 12 (U. P.).| Munitions Board, of which Mr. Pat(the A. F. of L. said that the Preé-|; jo jikelihood of shortages” in cies rests in the hands of the Presi- |... °.oh Government inspectors, so lated jo i vu the 16 regular and 59 reserve offi-

discretion to force manufacturers to give priority to Army and Navy orders. AGAINST BOOM: The commission revealed that it 5 Louis Compton, Assistant ] taries of the War and Navy, Lack of Caution in Defense spectively, to adopt a “preference : . classification” system designed to Economy Can Disrupt indicate the order in which the . Army and Navy desire contracts to Life, Survey Says. be filled It said the Joint Army-Navy —The American Federation of La- | onsen and ws Campion ate cos : LL chairmen, would establish classifiec [Jor Soday warned that ne Drea contract ratings within a few day lense 33 Zaps Swine unlass cere- Each contract or order would carry fully guided, “can disrupt our eco- " desired date for delivery. nomic life.” Expect No Shortages i 7 iness survey, ‘ess ; In its monthly business Survey,| .p,, commission said that there [paredness program. without proper | ot 4 . atavicle and ti i ost important materials, and that contr an “cause some jrontrols SILANE Rona n Some contractors should be able to meet [Hn d dee 2 als pre! dard 4 | their supply needs through regular [ oS So swan a % and purchasing channels. It said that [Faye pi en wi Me hi a contractor, if the supply problem wh Thr LS rs Of intense ac Y |becomes acute, however, should e Over. I wctinep : eo refer the matter to the Army and Since control over defense poli- Navy Munitions Board, directly or dent.” it added, “our future depends necessary steps can be taken fo 2 depres Revs Dele Knows mn Meantime, Mr. Patterson said ab peace-lime on his eecisions. {opening exercises at the Army Industrial College that the rearmament program will require at least a vear to “consolidate” the indus- © trial front and that “co-operation” 50,000 of tis ine is the vital factor. He spoke to < se - Fee S oo dle dur cers taking courses in industrial [651 foo persons Tea Sg a mobilization and military supply (that mon S 'e = problems $17,000 in June of 1939. " Retailers C : etailers Called A 1940 national income of ig $75.000.000.000, an increase of “We are still far from our $5,000,000,000 over 1939, was fore- of adequate preparedness on our |cast. ‘supply front,” he said. “At ihe | The survey predicted a 23 per present rate, we cannot achieve our

coal

Wabash President’s Funeral cent increase in industrial profits armament ohieuves in days, weeks It will take at least

during 1940, due partly to spending Or months. | under the multi-billion dollar de- a year pefore our industrial front |fense program. It placed prospective cal be consolidated; and a year Is | profits of 400 leading industrial a luxury we may never enjoy.

\corporations at $2.280,000,000, which | Miss Harriet Elliott, consumer adviser of the Defense Commission,

called a meeting of more than 100 [representatives of retail t

1927-29 and the high attained dur- | mtrerestis 1t | Aug. 29 to seek

ing the 1937 recovery year.

The reporting corporations, their co-operation

in avoiding possible price increases. | The retail industry, she wrote the representatives, is a key position to assist in maintaining a free flow of goods to consumers.

above those for the same period last vear. Dividend payments were up 14 per cent. Earners’ income rose

ASK THOUSANDS GIVE BLOOD FOR BRITAIN

WASHINGTON, Aug. 12 (U. P.. Chairman Norman H. Davis of the “We need the flow of their buy- American Red Cross announced toling power into non-defense con- day that thousands of New York [sumer goods industries, to keep City residents will be canvassed to these industries growing in a normal [donate blood voluntarily for British way, prevent top-heavy defense de- War victims. velopment, and build up our na-| The Blood

Seek Higher Wages

“Corporations have not increased wages as much as their earnings permitted,” the survey said “A (larger {low of income to workers is | [vital

Transfusion Better- | ment Association, he said, will con{vert the blood into plasma—that in- | part which remains after the red blood cells have been broken down by centrifugal force—as part of the to aid Plasma will keep [indefinitely when properly stored r Mr. Davis said the project would ‘ ia “furnish valuable experimental in$13,548 GIVEN RED CRUSS | formation” for the projected domes: Donation of $180 by individuals tic program to organize voluntal make plasma available

point increase in production over

{paper industries, it said.

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