Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 6 January 1941 — Page 2

‘BY ENTIRE

Britain Wonders Whether Congress Will Hurry Aid in Time for Victory, and Hitler Will Base Striking Time on American Action.

By WILLIAM PHILIP SIMMS Times Foreign Editor.

e Jan. 6.—No Congress in the nation’s _ history was ever watched by so many people, in so many lands, or with such varied hopes and, fears. : What this Congress does can hardly fail to affect in some degree the future of every one

WASHINGTON,

+ lion inhabitants.

Adolf Hitler will watch it, for upon it in no small mea-

sure depends not only the tim- .. ing but the success or failure

of his anticipated attempt to invade England and smash the British Empire with its 450,000,000 subjects. Japan will watch it. © For upon whether she believes America is bluffing or muddling depends her policy in the western Pacific and ‘her plans for expansion southward to the East

TY DEATH CATCHES | THE “DOOMED # 02LD wm

Naval Fliers Who Bailed Out Over Texas Perish | in Crash, Explosion, SAN DIEGO, Cal, Jan. 8 (U. P.).

night rather [than take their chances on a plane bucking a now- | storm with ice-laden wings, their numbers were up. They | were doomed. ; That’s how aviators at the liavy’s San Diego bese explained todyy the

of the earth’s two bilJ 4 deaths of four men who parachuted

William Rhodes Davis, international | chute cords! broke.

to safety over West Texas, an were killed Saturday night with [seven other officers and men whejn the transport - plane bringing |them home crashed and exploded on Mother Gruridy Peak, 45 miles from ere. |

MYSTERY MAN" WELCOMES QUIZ

Davis, International Oil Operator, Willing to Bare Deals With Axis,

NEW YORK, Jan. 6 (U. P.).—

“Those two guys who stuck tq their ship in the snowstorm are stil; alive in Texas. Those four other fellows took a beating in Texas anc then they finally got it after all. Their Bumbers were simply up. That's a =n :. { ” Some on Inquiry Board The fifth, man who jumped in Texas was [Killed when his |paraLieut. Murray

WITH 7 OTHERS

—When five Navy airmen pailed |; out of a 13-ton bomber Thursday:

“Think of it,” one Navy flier said. |:

The answer is “No.

There can be no ice Skating on Lake Sullivan

today or night because the ice isn’t thick enough. However, the ice experts of the Recreation Department have a little hope for tomorrow. - The ice is two inches thick now and must be four inches before it will

be opened to the general public. Andy.

Left to right the ice experts are

Miller, Lake Sullivan dick custodian; Wally Middlesworth, recreation director, and J. Edward Perry,

recreation department engineer.

{11TH INFAN HEADS TOWARD § CAMP CUSTER

Base Changed to Allow Guard Training at Ft. Harrison.

For 19. years the blue shield of the 11th Infantry has been a familiar insigna on the lapels of off- | duty soldiers strolling downtown streets. of Indianapolis. By 9 o'clock tomorrow night the blue shield will become a rarity in Indianapolis’ neighbors, 3400 strong, are on the

the City.

march northward.

quarters.

by train tomorrow

Guard regiment.

Early this morning a truck caravan bearing advance detachments and heavy wedpons left Ft. Harrison for Camp Custer, Mich., where the regiment will' take up new

Baggage Moves Out

Regimental baggage and freight moved out yesterday afternoon. At 8 o'clock and 8:20 o'clock tonight 1600 men will board trains at the military reservation and the remainder of the troops will move out

night.

Quarters vacated by the 11th Infantrg will bé filled Friday by 1000 men and officers of the 201st Infantry, a West Virginia Nation?l

TRY

famous

of Libya.

Mr. Mason

the same time the British should be

reaching the beleaguered garrison. The eventual capitulation of Tobruk seems inevitable because of scarcity of supplies if for no other reason. It would seem to be better strategy for Graziani under this circumstance not to bottle his main army. there but to leave a holding detachment only, as at Bardia. °°

Drive for Suez Possibie

If those tattics are followed and the main Italian body gets away from Tobruk, Graziani’'s final stand in Cyrenaica should be made at Benghazi. This port has been the principal supply base for the Italian operations in Libya and is 250 miles west of Tobruk.

Should the British eventually take Benghazi, the remaining part of Graziani’'s Army, if any, would have no alternative but to disperse into Triplitania, unfitted for further offensive operations. That objective would seem to be the major British objective. The British must take info consideration the possibility, however remote, that Germany will try to drive through Turkey toward Suez.

A

War Moves Today :

By J. W. T. MASON

United Press War Expert

‘Advices that British advance units are now ap= proaching Tobruk within 24 hours of the fall of Bardia indicates an Italian Army entirely out of the Cyrenaica province

intention to try to wipe the

The problem facing Marshal Graziani whether to’ make a major stand at Tobruk or only to duplicate the isolated defense of Bardia is a difficult one, If he concentrates his principal force at Tobruk it will be subjected to naval as well as land and air bombardment. At

able to cut the road west 6f Tobruk

as they cut the western Bardia Road, which would prevent fresh supplies

to face as a serious impediment against holding off the victorious British troops. If any considerable number of experienced German. aviators can reach Tobruk in time, they may succeed in temporarily

eventually wins battles. Nazi Indifference Ends The Germans no longer maintain their nonchalant attitude toward Italy’s declining combat spirit. The North African fighting, like the hostilities in Albania, was described at first in Berlin as of minor importance having no bearing on the final outcome of the war. | That position of assumed indife ference was unrealistic from the start since so, severe a collapse as now is occurring in Libya, coupled with the Italian misfortunes in Greece, must ‘affect home morale. The necessity for, bolstering Musso= lini is becoming a pressing problem for Germany. Thus there is direct relationship

holding up the British advance; but . Jit is the infantry, not airplanes, that

%

J

Nation Ready to Sacrifice For Defense, Poll Reveals

The voters reached in the survey were in no frame of mind to. tolerate strikes in the defense industries. This attitude does not mean, however, that the public wants to ignore the rights of labor. “Should employees of industries working on defense contracts have the right to protest, if they believe they are underpaid?” vive 89%

3 AN between the British successes in If the Italian Army’ in Libya were Libya and Germany's apparent plans not demdlished, a pincer movement|y “route a diversion in the Bal= against Suez from the west Co-oper-iyane However reluctant Hitler has ating with the German offensive |p... to expand complications in from the east would be possible.. |g5theastern Europe, he may now be Italian Morale Declines forced to move in that area to keep It is of supreme importance, his Axis partner from falling, desp

/ ‘|the danger of future trouble with therefore, for the British to follow through in Libya. If Graziani’s Russia and Turkey.

Army is obliterated or reduced to & few negligible regiments, the Britisk L ARSON ADDED TO ‘I. U. CENTER STAFF,

will be able to concentrate their en: L. C. Larson, director of the In

tire North African strength agains! any Nazi force that might attemp: diana University Bureau of Visual Instruction, has been added to the

a Turkish campaign. That is the reason why the fall of teaching staff of the Indianapolis Center of the I. P. Extension Di-

Bardia has such military value. It carries the British one step farther toward destruction of the Italian arm of the Suez pincer. The fact that between 60,000 and | vision and will teach a class in Visual Education here next semester. The course to be taught by Mr, Larson is a survey course for

70,000 Italians have surrendered teachers, supervisors and adminis=

within a month, although British casualties seem inconsequential, intrators, with emphasis upon the sound and visual classroom teach=

Hanson anc Ensign Robert | Clark who landed! the big bomber] in a few inches Df rain water, are still alive, Killed when the five-year-old transport crashed were: Machinist; H. S. Neff, 34 San Diego; Radioman A. M. Periy, 31, Los Angeles; Machinist Frank Recke Jr., 30, National City, Cal, and Radioman L. J. Hughgs, 30, Grand Rapids, Mich., who leaped to safety Thursday. { Lieut.-Coram. J. H. Gowen, 54, the pilot, l.eadhill, Ark.; Cp-pilot D. E. Ferguson, 33, Neponsett West Va.; Lieut,-Comm. Stephen B. Cooke, 42, Harrison, Ark.; V. S. Gaulin, 34, Lowell, Mass,; Lizut. J. C. Fleming, 36, Reading, Pa; Mechanic Marvin Magee, 32,) Long Branch, N. J, and Radioman Frank R. Naylor, £5, Dayton, Ky.. . Cooke, Gaulin and Fleminz were frietnhers o the board of inquiry whic ad | investigated the Texa. accident. | 8 5

Crishes in Storm

The plané¢ crashed in a rainstorm 100 feet bélow the summit of the peak. Its 3asoline tanks exploded with a flash that was visibly miles away, flinging fragments pf the fliers’ bodi¢s and the airplane over a quarter-niile area. A naval searching party hacked its way up the mountainside yesterday and packed the bodies of the victims to 4 highway. re A naval board of inquiry convenes today. It was believed that Gowan, blinded by the rain, had thought he was near San Di¢go and crashed as he dropped to glide in. One uncorifirmed report said that the plane ‘was over San Djego at one time #nd had circled kack. Gowan vias supposed to halve been riding the regular Civil Agronautics Authotity radio beam into San Diego. ? The widows of Hughes and Recke were prostrated. They had been in great suspense while the bomber

oil operator and peace advocate, waited today to hear whether the U. S. Senate would accept his invitation to investigate his dealings with the Axis powers.

In a conference with newspaper reporters yesterday, called to, dispel any aurd of mystery regarding his affairs “abroad, Mr. Davis ¢@isclosed that he had sent a letter tosSenator Eurton K. Wheeler (D. Mont) asking that a Senate committee investigate him. i Although he went into details of his background and business connections, revealed that he had owned an oil refining plant at Hamburg, Germany, and oil distributing facilities in Swedén, Norway, Denmark and Finland, before the war, Mr. Davis refused to discuss the reported “peace agenda’ he was said to have brought to this country from Germany soon after the war started. Verne Marshall, Cedar Rapids, Ia., editor and chairman of flie NoForeign - War - Committee, said a week ago that in October, 1939, Mr. Davis obtained an “agenda” 0 peace terms which Germany wantecl President Roosevelt to sponsor, but that the President's associates had prevented Mr. Davis from submitting it to him. Mr. Marshall’s critics have charged that Davis was a financial backer

§ Indies; ngapore and beyond. Even France will watch it, as E will Norway, Denmark, Poland, Czechoslovakia, Holland and Denmark. For mostly upon its acts they base their hopes for a democratic victory and aed the restoration of their future independence. | Similarly the people of Finland, ~ Bweden, Switzerland, Hungary, Ru‘mania, Greece, Bulgaria, Turkey, | Jugoslavia, Spain, Portugal, Egypt and the Middle East see in American opposition to the dictators their principal hope of escape from the domination of Berlin or Moscow. ~~ In the Western Hemisphere, each . “of the 20 Latin republics is fearful for its own future in a world dominated by the totalitarian powers, and is looking to the United States to do something to help them. :

Britain Needs U. S. Aid

| The reason for this vital interest ‘ in the American Congress is that it has now become axiomatic that, without the aid of the United States,

Britain and her allies can hardly OR o>. nan) 0 o-Foreign-War-Com mittee. win. And unless this particular|,, “pn oi" Genied that he was, but session of Congress functions in-|caiq he was in favor of all organizatelligently and promptly, foreign|tions working for peace. He said he observers fear such aid will come too | wanted the war to end, but “not on late. Adolf Hitler's terms —1I want this Hitler is said to be convinced that{war to end by negotiatior, before - the United States is not bluffing;|the women and children of the that some time this year—during|world are debauched and demoralthe second half rather than the|ized; before the wealth ani treasfirst—aid to Britain will begin to|ures of the world are destroyed, and arrive in considerable quantity. That| before human rights and liberty are 18 why he is said to have decided lost forever.”

definitely’ to win or lose in 1941. . I Wheeler in Favor

Normally, military experts here declare, March or April should . . Of Davis Inquiry LL] was in trouble and were articipatWASHINGTON, Jan. 6 (17. P).— ing a jovful reunion with their Sides . 15

bring Hitler's all-out offensive Senator Burton K. Whetler (D.|husbands when they learn:d they Svesnss str 10. 0 ATHOLIC LECTURE ”

i against Britain. They discount | "major moves in other possible theMont.) said today he fayored a|had been killed. Congressional investigation of pur-{ Mrs, Jeiny S. Perry, mother of SEPARATE study was made ; of those who indicated that ‘SERIES WILL OPEN The New Year's series of lectures

| asters of operations because, they i say, Hitler knows the war will not ! . be won until Britain caves in, re- So k pure | gardless of victories elsewhere. So|Ported German peace terns that| Radioman A. M. Perry, Lad de- | '' they are inclined to believe that Fiism R. Davis, international oil|scribed his parachute jump to her| their jobs are connected with the strike earlier than would norma ont brought to the Siate De- Los Angeles Sunday Schocl class.{ defense program. Among this earlier t wo no lly Mr Wh ler declared “8 h Then she read a telegram from| group, 76 per cent were, willing to . Wheeler declared: “Since he|pnaua) “officials, sent before the| sacrifice the time and a half pay |SPonsored by the Catholic Informaprinciple and work longer hours |tion Bureau will be opened by the Rev. Fr. Bernard Gordon, tomorrow at 8 p. m. in the reading room, Capitol Ave. and Georgia Sts.

Draftees will build the organization to a strength of 3000 men and 150 officers. The local fort will become a draftee reception center and | National Guard training post. At Camp Custer, the 11th Infantry will join other units of toe Fifth Division, of which it is a combat unit, for field training and winter ski instruction.

Families Have Moved

Many families of officers and enlisted men of the regiment already have moved to Battle Creek, Mich, near the military post. With the regiment, which dates from the Civil War, will go the 11th Infantry Band, one of the most famous in the country. Meanwhile, in the middle of moving activities at the Fort, the post has been a hivouac center for other Fifth Division units on the march to Camp Custer from Southern points. | Truck and train convoys have been stopping at the Fort overnight.

Guard Eyes Camp Shelby

As the 11th Infantry moved out, nreparations were being made at the Indiana National Guard Armory, 711 N. Pennsylvania St., to evacuate another famous unit, the 38th National Guard Division, headed by Maj. Gen. Robert S. Tyndall. Training plans for the unit at camp Shelby, . Hattiesburg, Miss., were examined yesterday and commanded by Maj. Gen. Leslie J. McNair, U. 8 Army General Headquarters chief of staff, who flew here from Washington. The 38th Division, composed of Indiana, Kentucky and West Virginia National Guardsmen, will leave for Camp Shelby a few days after Jan. 17 when it will become a part of the Army of the United States. A group of other officers, including Col. Edgar Frye: from the Fifth Corps Area headquarters at Ft. Hayes, O., also conferred with Gen. Tyndall and his staff.

WOMEN. OF MOOSE TO DISCUSS SESSION

Mrs. Mary Sisson Wallace, of Cin-| cinnati, O., will make her first of several visits ‘to the Indianapolis Chapter, Women of the Moose, Thursday as official Junior Graduate Grand Regent of the “College of Regents.” These visits are to be devoted to

By Dr. George Gallup

Director American Institute of Public Opinion.

procs, N. J, Jan. 6.— Evidence that the American people are ready to roll up their sleeves and go to work to speed production of guns, warplanes, tanks, warships and other essentials for re-armament, comes from a nation-wide survey of public opinion on one of the country’s most vital problems today—the defense issue. To get an indication of how far the voters are willing to go in speeding up the defense program, the Institute put a series of ques- | tions to a cross-section of the votJ ing public in its study. The first dealt with an idea often discussed but not yet generaily put, into effect throughout the defense industries:

“In order to speed up defense production, should factories making war materials hire enough men to work 24 hours a day (three shifts) 2” The replies to this were over= whelmingly affirmative:

Le

Mr. Simms

“Should they have the right to strike if their protests are not taken care of?”

Yes ... . 21% No SIP RNNNNNTYN an 61 Don’t Know ......ccco000:0e 12 By income groups, the vote on whether labor should have the right to strike, is as follows:

Upper Middle Lower . 11% 27% 30% No 64 51 Undecided. 7 9 19 8 8 =

N place of the strike, the public (93%) wants to see a law compelling employers and unions to submit their differences to a Federal Labor Board for conciliation. One important question remains. Does the public want te Jet business: go scot free while labor’s rights are being restricted?

“In connection with our national defense program, do you favor increasing or decreasing Government regulation and control of industry?” INCTEASe ...cersvsvssssrass 31%

EERE EER RRR 12

Don’t KBOW .ccoceccsnes.. 13 No change ..... Civevssives 24

e000 00000000 0

dicates a grave decline in Italian military morale. It is invariable for defeatism to spread through an army under such an impetus. Marshal Graziani has ghat factor

Car ye =. ’ y ’ a a . p, d v | SD DAR a Pa d . q 3 % ps Ps = :

89% eer setae ses ssseR tent en 1

No Undecided ......

Even more indicative of the pos=itive public interest in defense is that the rank and file of American workers are willing to sacri=fice the principle of time and a half pay for overtime work if defense production could thereby be increased.

“If it would help speed up the defense’ program, would you be willing to work mere hours per week at the same rate of pay per hour as you are now getting?” |

ses stocse 1

NO MATTER WHERE THEY UNE...

Close in . , . far out . . . in the humblest cottage . . . Of

Hitler is more likely than not to in the loftiest mansion . . . any bereaved family may expect : Ri . be the case. ‘ ive the finest service that Harry W. Moore, with has asked for such an investiga-iyre i receive | Japan May Hesitate tion, I am in favor of giving i, to Vieousge bt ihe transport lsd. been : many years of experience, is able to render. A wide range of President Roosevelt, therefore, is|him.” | 8 hae i at the same hourly rate. This ! expected to keep right behind Con- \ We regret to inform jou that| vote, of course, represents only ; . your son is missing,” it said. the rank and file of defense workers reached in the sample, and

. & " gress in an effort to s ed up aid A i Bre ai or os 1t Reneved that 2 DIRECT SESSION She told the class that sie hoped

prices enables anyone to afford the funeral service increas-

ingly prefecred by Indianapolis people in all walks of life,

Congress itself will be laggard. The chief fear of most of the observers in the diplomatic gallery is that,

her son was safe, that ‘I am a Christian / woman. I commif my son to the cire of God and whatever

ON STUDENT WORK

not the opinion of labor union leaders or executives. The extent to which the public

Father Gerdon will speak on “Religion and Sacrifice.” He will be

followed on other Tuesdays by the Very Rev. Msgr. Henry F. Dugan

discussion of arrangements for the International Conference of Women of the Moose, to be held in conjunction with the Loyal Order of

has become “emergency minded” is further revealed in the next question. “If a factory refuses to make defense materials for the Government at a price considered reasonable by the Defense Commission, should the Government take over that factory?

Yes "EI EI te AT EEE E EE RR) 1% No 32 Undecided ,....co000.000 7

HERE is one other factor in the defense problem about

happens is the will of God.” A little later the Nayy telegraphed aer that he was idead.

LUNCHEON SET FOR NEXT THURSDAY NOON

The Shcial Club of Monumental Division, | 128,. Auxiliary ' to the Brotherhood of Locomotive Engineers, will meet Thursda at the home off Mrs. J. A. Fuliaer, 2429 Adams $t. A covered dish luncheon willbe served at noor. Mrs. I"ulmer will be assisted by Mrs. D. O. Watson, Mrs. 1eo Near-

Dr. Philip M. Bail, dean of the Butler University College of Education, and Robert S. Richey, State National Youth Administrator, will be co-chairmen in" charge of arrangements for a Joint Conference on Student Work Jan. 14, The conference will be held in Arthur Jordan Memorial Hall, and is being sponsored by the Butler College of Education and the Indiana National Youth Administration. Paul B. Jacobson, national chairman of the Student Work Council, NYA, principal of the University of Chicago High School, will speak

despite the overwhelming sentiment “in favor of all possible assistance short of war, it will insist on .debating while Hitler completes his preparations to land in England. There is a growing impression here that Japan will not be easy to maneuver into the war merely to help her Axis allies. If Congress ‘and the country show they mean business: by buckling down to the job of national defense quickly anh ‘| efficiently, it is felt, no amount of ~ ‘pressure from Berlin will budge «= Japan.

Moose convention in August. A Junior Graduate Grand Regent Class of candidates in honor of Mrs. Wallace will be initiated by the Indianapolis Chapter and sponsored by the membership committee. A dinner ‘also will be given in Mrs. |} Wallace's honor at the temple with |; the executive board. .- :

STATE MEDICAL AIDS TO CONVENE JAN. 19

Secretaries of Indiana medical

and the Revs. Leonard Wernsing, Bernard Sheridan, Edwin F. Sahm, John B. Casey, Joseph V. Beechem and Raymond Bosler. Informal talks on religious subjects also will be’ given each Thursday evening at the same hour and in the same place by the Rev. Fr. Richard P. Grogan, director of the lecture series.

MRS. BERTHA ISKE DIES AT SON'S HOME

AARAU-ALINO0RE -

PEACE CHAPEL 2050 E. WICHIGAN ST. » CHERRY 6020

which the Hunting

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at the opening program. garder snd Mrs. Cora. Dorsey.

public has definite views—labor.

Mrs. Bertha M. Iske, lifelong resi-

‘| dent of Indianapolis, died today at

the home of her son, Frank C. Iske,

‘societies will convene here Jan. 19 for the 16th annual secretaries’ annual conference at the Indianapolis

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Ernie Pyle in London Someone Gave His a Wrong Tip—He Finds Scads of Hot Water and a ‘Dream of a Bed'

(Continued from Page One)

things around the hotel! that remind you. | ,Over the big windows of my room, looking out onto the Strand, hang thick, heavily patded curtains. On the street side these are black, on the room side brown satin. Instead of being an unsightly makeshift, they are beautiful. , Hanging on them is a card warning me not to oper the curtains during the blackout under any circumstances. I was so apprehensive about doing something I shouldn't that I slept all that first night without opening a window. I slept soundly, loo, but naturally I was groggy in the

in Lima, O. She was 80. The widow of Charles F. Iske, she was a member of the Carrollton Avenue Reformed Church. Mrs. Iske also is sufvived by three other sons, Carl G., Edward G. and Alvin G. 1ske, all of Indianapolis; two granddaughters, and a niece. . Services will be held at 1:30 p. m. Wednesday at the Flanner & Buchanan Mortuary. Burial will be in

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Athletic Club. : The principal speaker of the oneday meeting will be Irvin Avell, M. D., Louisville, Ky., chairman, com=mitte on Medical Preparedness of the American Medical Association. His talk, to precede the annual ‘| dinner, will be a discussion of “The Medical Phase of the Defense Program.” An election of 1941 officers will be held during the afternoon ‘session.

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think of to wrap around his body or hang upon it. In fact, the store windows are so entrancing that I'm going a little crazy and buying sweaters and coats . and things I don’t need at all, just because they are so good-looking. And about the concentrated food pills. Well, I haven't wanted gnything to eat yet that I couldn't get, except enough sugar. And I can buy - everything imaginable from toothpaste to trench coats. I have heard that paper is run=ning short, but yesterday I bought 500 sheets of the same kind of writing paper I use at home, and at two-thirds the usual price. Lastly, about those beef cubes I should have bought. Apparently the national drink in England is a beéf extract called Bovril, which is advertised everywhere like Coca-Cola at home. Yesterday I went into a snack bar for some lunch. I asked the waitress just what. this Bovril stuff was, and in a cockney accent. that would lay you in the aisle she said: “Why, sir, it’s beef juice and it's wonderful for you on cold days like this. It’s expensive, but -it's body-building, sir; it’s very bodybuilding.” 80 I had a cup. ‘It cost 5 cents, and you just ought to see my body being built.

| » ” » | HE hotel's big dining room his been moved to a lower floor, the better to kezp away from the bombs. Here the waiters ar¢ all in formal clothes, an orchesira plays, and bellboys hurry about calling people to the teleph¢ne. You'd hardly know there was a war except that half of the hats in the checkjoom are tin hats, half the diners are in uniforin, and hanging from the great ‘enter chandelier i; an oldfashioned kerosene lantern, just in case. |

On each table stands 'a handsomely’ printed card which says: “This room is provided ‘with special protection from blast an splintérs. The inner wall is 14 inches thick. The outer wall, five

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