Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 4 October 1940 — Page 5
FRIDAY, OCT. 4, 1940 Today's War Moves—
DUCE, FUEHRER MAY DIFFER ON
Tha Ra
NEW STRATEGY
Today’s Meeting Culminates |
Series of Italian and German Talks.
(Continued from Page One)
they can do to try to rectify the
difficult situation facing them must » have been discussed at Brenner | Pass, but the complications are tos:
Serious for quick agreement conCerning future policy.
Mussolini is cautious while Hitler
always impetuously searches for ways of action. The new alliance with Japan, however, has darkened
the dictators’ future path, instead of | 8
illuminating it. The United States has taken the triple alliance as a threat. Nor is it possible for Germany and Italy to know in advance what
Russia's reply to the new alliance will be. #
Thus, Mussolini checked in Great Britain and the Mediterranean but also they have now to reckon with increased resentments in America and Russia. The easy conquest anticipated by the dictators have vanished. It is no cause for wonder, therefore, that Ribbentrop and Ciano could not find mutually [acceptable plans for the future, necessitating
not only are Hitler and|g
Elvira Schwear ... She never
By HARRY MORRISON
SI OR RR SR A A RE RI ARS
thought she’d be Tipton’s Queen.
Elvira Schwear, Brunet and
17, Wins $50, Trip to Fair
York to see the Fair, stay at a Park
Rules Tipton's Festival
ditch
WILLKI
pr
:
E'S TRIP BECOMES EPIC OF DEMOCRACY
; Pittsburgh Gives Respectful
Hearing as He Pledges To Keep Labor Gains.
(Continued from Page One)
front of their schools behind which
one could see the smokestacks rising. Teachers stood by patiently and let them yell their young heads off derisively. |
Many were men and women,
| | white, black, yellow, with a heritage
that goes ‘back in many cases to lands across the oceans. Policemen stood with them, and let them say what they pleased, only careful to see that they stood back so that the procession could pass without
injuring them.
Talks With Candor
And the big man who wants to be President watched it all, and heard it all, with good humor and patience. Now and again he stopped in his 50-mile ride through the valley of steel to talk to them, candidly | and fearlessly. He only asked that] they keep their minds open, that they listen to his arguments and those of the other side and vote thoughtfully when the time comes. And they gave him a respectful hearing. They seemed to. admire his spunk and his frankness. “To one who sat all day on the folded-back top of an autorhobile close behind the car which carried him and Mrs. Willkie, it was the finest demonstration of the free play
THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
New Auxiliary
President Here
MRS. LOUIS J. LEMSTRA of Clinton, Ind., the new national president of the American Legion Auxiliary, paid her first official visit to national headquarters today. She spent the day clearing her desk of correspondence which had accumulated since her election in
Boston last week. She also was to confer with Mrs. Gwendolyn MacDowell, national secretary, and. Mrs. Cecilia’ Wenze, national treasurer, who were reelected.
BRITISH WATCH FOR NAZI PLANE CHANGE
LONDON, Oct. 4 (U, P). — Britain's air defense experts said today that German planes raiding Britain are out-dated and expressed belief that new models are being developed for use next spring. Air defense crews have been instructed to watch closely for experimental new planes. It is assumed that the Germans will give prototypes of new planes extensive tests under actual combat before putting them into production. The British are developing new models themselves and are even using them. They'd like to see what these new models will be asked to meet. The Germans have used a score or more of plane-types from time to time, but the British have taken each type to pieces, testing its strength and weakness, and have actually repaired some of them for
CORN-BELTERS FIGHT 30 TERN
Distribute Pamphlets After Protest Meeting at Claypool. -
Members of the Corn Belt Liberty League were traveling to all corners of the state today, .distributing pamphlets against a third term for President Roosevelt. Their campaign of protest against the New Deal farm program, especially the foreign market policies of the present administration, were outlined at a meeting of representatives from 50 counties here yesterday. R. Lowell McDaniel, national vice president of the league, told the group that league speakers “will be selected from both Democratic and Republican parties.” - “There can be nothing political in appealing to a farmer to save his independence,” he said. Frederick E. Shortemeier, former Secretary of State, told the farmers that the New Deal has begun a plan of “Europeanizing' the United States, usurping one personal liberty
after another. “If the New Deal is permitted to continue, it will not be long until we
Wrong Place To Pick Pocket
in night court charged with pick- | ing pockets. Suddenly Detective | | Charles Tracy, who brought him in, exclaimed: : “Whose hand is
It was Pilger’s.
WILLKIE CLUBS PLAN
i i
Plans for a state-wide mass meeting were being arranged today bg James F. Frenzel, director of t Indiana Willkie Clubs. { The rally demonstration was d : cussed at a meeting of 60 president of county Willkie clubs over {1 %
state at the Washington Hotel ye$ terday.
ganization by election day, Nov. 5. | Mr. Frenzel told the club leaders. that working organizations had been formed in 73 counties in |Indiang and that the members are! “mostly persons who have not been active iy politics.” ¢
MACK NAMED HEAD OF MURPHY STORE
PITTSBURGH, Oct. 4 (U. P..
C
i
will not be given the opportunity of | speaking our thoughts as we are doing today,” he said. . : | State Senator Thurman Bid-| dinger of Marion told league mem-| bers that the New Deal farm. legis-|
lation, ‘like -all regimentation legis-|
ed president of the G. C. Murph Co., yesterday . to fill vacancie caused by the death of |John Mack. :
in my pocket?” {|
man and Walter C. Shaw was elect,
BE %
" A
as the membership of the state orgy
STATE-WIDE MEETING -
i| 11/0. Head Reported Asks: 11. Better Terms for Sup-
¢ fort of Third Term. 4
yo
By LYLE C. WILSON hited Press Staff Correspondent
HINGTON, Oct. 4—Presis: hn L. Lewis of the C. I. O.
eported today to be holding’
"br better terms before pledg= «is support to the Roosevelts. li ce ticket. A re were reports also of an. . ‘conference between Mr. Lewis® . Vendell L. Willkie. . ‘were in the same hotel in
Last night:
urgh where Mr. Lewis is at-
. hg a conference of steel work
ire was no confirmation of a
e-Lewis get-together. When {if he planned to see Mr. WillIr. Lewis said he was “not go-
Hh discuss politics today.” . lichever way he goes—if he
bel LMr. Lewis will have to eat
F-a1S,
/. language. He told the United
Workers’ convention at CoO., last winter that Mr.
6¢. ‘velt would meet “ignominious
tt” if-he sought a third term.
‘afterward Mr. Lewis paid his ots to the Republican Party:
"bes not pretend -to serve any-
iol it.
. © ne. jut the financial interests who Edgar M. Mack was elected chair Int
In a major sense, it is
"ly hostile to labor.”
5 Government contracts issue
iv. Ing the C. I. O. and the New i iseems now to have been re-
g
‘4 to the satisfaction of labor
ition of Attorney General Rob-
1 ’ The new chairman of the boar: wii: Jackson deciding the Nation lation, attempts to bring the pro-|was vice president in charge of mew | jJefense Advisory Commission gressive individual down to the aver-|chandise, a position to which h/ «a within its rights in ruling that age level, creating classes and caus-/ moved from that of general sald ol! bfense contracts be awarded to ing each class to hate the other.” Imanager. ; | violating Federal labor laws.
IN INDIAN/ > “ROGER: | x for DIA] || * for WAT
Avenue hotel and have dinner at the flying training combats against their own planes. They think they know the answer to each German
plane now in use.
of democracy ever witnessed. There was something splendid about it Wendell Willkie’s baptism of de-
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matter into their own hands. Hitler was accompanied by Field strategist, but Mussolini's military Ties ‘Sia Welter . | Waldorf attendant was a lesser adviser, Gen-| TIPTON, Oct. 4—That loud noise | ST : “I'm going to see All the interauthoritative position. | |the roosters on the Schwear farm esUDE i edd At the i rating | i litt A : ear 1s a - as! ; : Same: ime, isdersting crowing 2 tis louge: ifall High School and was a rep-|most enthusiastic welcoming demoni i ev i tration he yet has received in this Is being made in Tokyo. It is ap-|they knew that 17-year-old Elvira She weighs 117 pounds and is 5 feet 2 y parent that Japan does not intend schwear was named Queen of the 5 i tec tall | ; | Benin Showered With Ticker Tape as-an instrument for their sole Eu-| io a: ; 4 ropean purposes. Indeed, the gen- night. She almost cried, . \work at Windfall and her ambition] This was in downtown Pittsburgh, A basketball crowd of 3000 Tipton is to come to the big city and be \ 5, £ 4 e ler and Mussolini look, is becoming | je y ot fas oh : screaming tntoyush 3 - Shower 0 dissillusioning. Mussolini [might well | the roof of the high school gymnas-| ast night was a big one for the| ticker tape and confetti lium here as Miss Schwear, a slight crowd as well as the girls. Days of Reine i Setar : bulwarks of the bankers and steelDaye Yeln nay ra Riles 20 over 53 other girls from six county snd hours of practicing before mir-| masters who are the lords of Pittsrors culminated in one big moment : As the Rev. L. R. Gray announced when the girls pirouetted and the] These dropped down their paper ==] (he name of the winner, Miss crowd yelled. benedictions Then, after a time, he } ° | . : / LY eed Shi in jother township winners crowded publisher found a corner against|among the people who ‘make steel. i y pp g (around. with congratulations. 'the side wall and watched with the Here in South Pittsburgh he was : z : ” L araw / ; i ; iver ‘ho, to the featherweight? We'll call at your _\ | Pen.” she gasped. lcrowd, for last night all belonged | side of the river, and who, Seared over ive adr )| The Queen and her Court of to the girls. workmen's way of thinking, would and principal towns. For super- {| | Tipton today and they will be again garet Singer of Liberty Township, velt has given them, though all day speed use 3-mile-a-minute Air { |tomorrow, Their wishes are law in Evelyn Furnung of Windfall Town- | long and again at night, before b i % | , sgh . 3 he Special delivery. Just phone. \ will be the center of every attrac- Township, Velma Rayls of Prairie Pledged them earnestly that ] J tion and will rule at the dance,| Township, Joan Mott of Cicero| Would maintain all their guarantees RAILWAY« A : { Saturday night. was chosen to represent Madison the Wagemour Act, the Social Se-NATION-WIDE RAIL-AIR SERVICE The Queen's reward is $50 in cash.| Township when Miss Schwear was |CUIlty Act. gelist, through towns whose names are written across the pages of soshed in the long fight of labor to free itself —Homestead, where he Keesport, Braddock Those battles are hard to forget, even under the came among them. Four Years Ago Recalled No evangelist: ever worked harder. All day long he stood in his car For his pain and his troubles he got choruses of “boo!” and “We Four years ago Franklin D. Roosevelt stood before 60,000 screaming Willkie spoke last night. In the eyes of the crowd that night there | Remembered above all was a | dumpy little woman, wearing crushed ‘blue paper hat—one of those dis- | tributed for the occasion by the the field screeching at the top of her voice, a little like those women hats in another revolution. | That woman, and her kind, were | {
EVERY
Hitler and Mussolini taking the Marshal Keitel, Germany's leading -eral Nacci, who do n south of Hobbs this morning was : > 083 Nou oetitpy 2 g ting things,” said the Queen. rision came as the aftermath of the comment about the tri 11i ile . o | a e triple alliance| Like all the rest of the county, resentative from Madison Township. campaign to be used by Hitler and Mussolini Tipton County Corn Festival last!” gpe is majoring in sEcrotarial . : Te : which was a mass of fervent people eral trend of events wherever Hit-|nounty farmers and townfolk raised | somebody's perfect secretary. A i i Here were the tall buildings, the be the first to discern this and to inet with big eyes, was chosen preparation. yards of new dresses now at Brenner Pass. | fownships, burgh {Schwear took a deep breath and the" The town banker ‘and ihe town | crossed the river to show himself Have you a package heavy or [| I never thought this would hap- mayor. They were just part of the the man who represents the other at no extra charge in all cities [| | Honor were the proudest girls in| The Queen's Court included Mar-| Ot protect many things Mr. RooseExpress. Special pickup and {{ [this town of 5000 right now. They ship, Ruby Stafford of Jefferson many thousands in Forbes Field, he’ EXPRESS which will end the celebration Township and Marjorie Heflin, who and gains—the Wagner Labor Act, AGENCY INC . She and her court will go to New | named Queen. He was riding, a. pleading evancial history in the blood of men went first; Duquesne, Clairton, Mcpersuasive charm of the man who And Wendell Willkie tried hard. and waved and smiled. want Roosevelt!” people at Forbes Field, where Mr. was -an almost fanatical devotion. | across her head a red, ‘white and | Democratic bosses—who raced across : perfectly matched modern many years ago who wore tricolored w ANTED missing from the crowd last night. : Pr
FUR TRIMMEV F.D. R. TAKES NOTICE FASHION. r OF AXIS ENMITY
(Continued from Page One)
vast importance to the Axis. Therefore it is normal strategy to do something before Nov. 5 which would somehow have a great effect on the electoral campaign.” | Mr. Roosevelt was. asked if his} | attention to this dispatch had any connection with the charges made by Henry A. Wallace that the Axis would welcome election of Wendell | L. Willkie. { The President refused to answer the question directly. He said the correspondents might make their own conclusions. Mr. Roosevelt indicated there is no legal barriet against Canadian Si | civilians receiving aerial instruction 1zes | in the United States—instruction to 12 $0 20 | be put to military use after their 38 to 44 | departure from this country. The President disclosed a tenta46 to 52. | tive itinerary which will take him into the industrial heart of Penn- + sylvania and Ohio next week—back= | tracking the trail of Mr. Willkie. Plans for the trip, beginning Oct. | 10, called for Mr. Roosevelt to stop at Johnstown, Seward and Pittsburgh, Pa., and at Youngstown, Columbus and Dayton, O., returning to
Saturday Sensation ¢« 09 | Washington Oct. 13. The trip will be climaxed at 8
|p. m. (Indianapolis time), Oct. 12 DRESS SCOOP oo | when Mr. Roosevelt will speak by [2 | radio from Dayton on America’s reBETTER TYPE WOOLS, VELVETEEN | armament and draft program. and CORDUROQYS
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