Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 21 March 1941 — Page 3
FRIDAY, MARCH 21, 1941
More Funds Urged for
\ 3600 Army Bombers
‘May Sign Pact
Fortification of New Atlantic Bases Also Asked as House Group Requests Four Billions.
WASHINGTON, March 21 (U.P.).—The House Appropriations Committee today recommended $4073,810074 more in cash and contract authorizations today to buy 3600 bombers for the Army, fortify the nation's new Atlantic bases, and buy naval ordnance, The bill was scheduled for passage by the House within a few hours. Reported only two days after the House approved the $7,000,000,000 British-aid appropriation, the mea- ; : sure set a House record week's appropriations which was exceeded only by one week World War. The Appropriations Committee | released secret testimony in which /sions, will make two more with funds the Chief of Staff, Gen. George C.|in the pending bill, and then have Marshall, revealed that the U. 8. .carve enough to convert one or has recently received new “and more of the present triangular inmore exact” data on German panzer fantry divisions if necessary. division operations in France last “grohjionts of other testimony by vear and that the Army is consider- Marshall bi marsia ing forming eight such divisions here The testimony also disclosed that an Army request impending for funds to step up pilot training from " a a a rate of Hy Re now to 30,000 Production of 21.000 a year, a vear. to man the new planes excludes the Navy program
He 9 sliver Ar ; S The bombers are to be produced 2 Delivery of Army planes to reach a maximum next
at aircraft assembly plants being begin ; : built at Omaha. Kansas City. Kas. | October, but will start “rolling very Tulsa and Ft. Worth well’ in April and May. The 3600 bombers are in addition, 3. There will be a maximum of to the Army's 18,000 plane program | 12,093 air cadets under training ot for this year. which already had any one time in 1941, of whom heen approved and financed except! 10.802 will be pilots, 250 navigators, for 1425 planes deferred because of and the remainder technicians. increased airplane costs and lack of 4, Aircraft production costs have enough productive facilities, {increased 20 per cent. Strikes have Other big items included $379.- not affected Army plane produc859.700 to pay the additional cost| tion. incident to maintaining anda train-/ 5. The Army plans to spend ing an Army of 1,500.000 men, [eventually $188.000,000 on new AtGen. Marshall said the Army lantic bases acquired from Britain,
Congress Gets Seaway Pact
WASHINGTON, March 21 (U. P).-—Presiaent Roosevelt mitted to Congress the new U, S.-Canadian agreement for power and navigation development in the International Rapids section of the St, Lawrence River, which also ciears the way for eventual completion of the entire Great Lakes-St., Lawrence seaway if Congress approves, The agreement revealed that the United States would pay for the bulk of the International Rapids] ss ps project—an estimated $206,000,000 of | would submit periodic reports to the the $266,000000 total. The U. S./two Governments on the progress Cost figure includes $90,000,000 of the work.” which New York State probably will, ; be asked to pay for power develop-| Canada agreed complete not ment phases of the program. | later than Dee. 31, 1948. the essenCanada, on the other hand, would | tial Canadian links in the projected bay about $60,000,000, of ¥hich waterway which would streich from 843,000,000 would represent power Duluth, Minn. to the Atlantic, by development on the Canadian side way of the Great Lakes and the
of the Rapids. [Si. Lawrence River. This presumA summary of the agreement re-|,p1y would include deepening of the leased by the State Department eX- historic Welland Canal linking plained that the U. S. Share of the |; oc Erie and Ontario : development would be larger be- | : cause Canada would be credited for! Canada Would Construct Works the money it spent to develop the Canada Welland Canal, a vital link in the projected seaway, the Engineers estimated that if the entire seaway is completed, the pasin commission. United States would have to invest " : an additional $50,000000 for deep-| ine United Stales agreed to conening channels and allied work in Struct works in the Rapids section the Great Lakes area. | allocated to it by the commission, In his letter of transmittal, Mr./io operate and maintain the works Roosevelt said that the agreement i, U. 8 territory and to complete provides for “completion of the es- jis share of the works in the Rapids sential links in the Great Lakes- | cection and in the Great Lakes we LiSwenke deel Ne ae above Lake Erie not later than the States and Canada agree that cir- date of romblenon ol Yhe essential : Canadian links, cumstances require it The agreement was signed in Ottawa Wednesday.
(0 eight divisions, if and when the during the jg.0 of the Army reaches 2,800,000. The Army now has two ~uch divi-
ling airplane production in addition to those already appropriated emsbraces a program of Army airplane That
is
to
likewise would
works in the International
| certain exceptions each country is to utilize one-half of the natural flow available for power developEssentially, the agreement calls for Ment in the Rapids section and each creation of a Great Lakes-St. Law-! Government may arrange for the rence basin commission of not more, INStallation of power machinery and than 10 members, consisting of an|auipment at times convenient to equal number from the United Meet its requirements. Water which States and Canada., partment summary ment stated: “The duties of this commission would be to prepare and recommend general plans and specifications for) the construction of works in the International Rapids section, prepare a schedule allocating the construction of these works to the respective governments approve all contracts and supervise the construction work The commission
Calls for Commission
the agree- bany watershed into the Great { Lakes basin is exempted from the equality of diversion provision
of
DISGUISED NAZIS HELD ISTANBUL, March 21 (U. P).— Two Germans, disguised as Turk-
their frequent trips from Istanbul to the frontier region had aroused ‘suspicion,
w— —————.
STRAUSS SAYS:
Store Hours Saturday—9 to &
for one |pians to build its armored forces up,
and other Army officers:| 1. Funds in the bill for expedit-]
will |
today sub=- |
construct !
Rapids section allocated to it by the
The agreement provided that with |
A State De. Ontario plans to divert from the Al-!
JUGOSLAVS IN | Really Means It AXIS SHADOW 4
i | Sunday | Unless Dissension Grows; | Serbs Split Cabinet.
(Continued from Page One)
mise which was laid before the Cabinet provided for modified Jugoslav adherence to the Axis, ‘reservations guaranteed Jugoslav | (territorial integrity but Jermitted | movement of Nazi war supplies, hos- | | pital material and wounded troops! and would bind Jugoslavia more [closely to the German economic
sphere. Jugoslavia also would agree | {to suppress all anti-Axis elements! |in the country.
| Army Attitude Watched
Special |
The attitude of the Army may | determine the situation. Both Army leaders and the common | soldiery are regarded as strongly anti-Axis. Jugoslavia has some 650,000 troops under arms at present and 350,000 under call for service, nS The nation is as much a melting | “Sergeant mascot of pot as any of the post-war succes- 2d itary . any at sion states. we mi ary company a The Serbs constitute the largest Camp Forrest, Tenn, decked out with a police club, pistol and M.
single population group with about 6.750.000. Croats come next at| p pand, He bites men not in uniform,
Prince,” police
about 4,475,000 while there are about | 1,500,000 Slovenes, There are, however, three other important minor- | ity groups—some 500.000 Germans. 500,00 Magyars and about 500,000 Albanian Mohammedans. The total population of Jugoslavia is something over 15,000,000. The Croats, despite their smaller population, are the leading figures in the present Government, and may be in a position to force through the agreement with Germany despite opposition of Serbian and other elements of the country,
Today's War Mores—
JUGOSLAV RIFT (GALLED SERIOUS
British Continue to Hope
Possible if Balkan War Goes Against Nazis.
The British, with the aid of Turkey and Greece, have been making | every effort to stiffen Jugoslav re-, sistance to Germany in the mini- | num hope of protracting the nego- | tiations and in the maximum hope that eventually Jugoslavia might be drawn into some kind of Balkan front against the Germans. A diplomatic event which may be linked with the Jugoslavia situation was occurring in Germany where the Hungarian Foreign Minister, Ladislas Bardossy, conferred with Foreign Minister Joachim von Ribbentrop at Munich, Jugoslavia recently renewed al friendship pact with Hungary. The Hungarian visit was described officially as a courtesy call. since | Bardossy oniy recently assumed the {Foreign Affairs portfolio at Budapest. However, such visits usually have other objectives. A special communique of the German High Command claimed that German submarines have sunk another 69.000 tons of British shipping, this time from a British convoy off the African Coast,
| R. A. F. Attacks Lorient
(Continued from Page One)
tant, advantage has been ziven
any German attack on Greece, stake in Belgrade, the limited concessions
made to Germany, Risky Path Left Open
If the Fuehrer decides that necessary to attack eastern
reportedly
troubles, to him. the Vardar
only two ways are
River in north over especially
to the plains The other is mountains,
approach Salonika. Bulgarian
sents serious obstacles,
If Jugoslavia holds fast to re.
The terrific pounding which the German Luftwaffe now is dealing out to British cities went on with Plymouth, embarkation point for the Pilgrims. selected as last night's victim. The Royal Air Force concentrated on the German submarine base of Lorient during the night, giving it its 48th pounding. The Germans said that the attack on Plymouth was most successful, adding that several ships in the harbor were set afire, Fighting on the only Balkan front—that in Albania--slowed down as if waiting for the outcome | of the diplomatic tug-of-war which | {has gone on in Jugoslavia. | A Greek war communique ported only “limited patrol artillery action.”
entrance into Greece will be closed Hitler must then take the risky
through the narrow mountain passes. These highways tected. on a wide front to flank and frontal defending force. Greeks decide to make their stand in these positions, it seem that a German would encounter heavy
are easily
fire from
establish narrow Greek frontier.
Supplies Also Problem
Should the Germans, however re- eventually penetrate across and mountain passes and hold fast
confirmed and pointed out that ting supplies. The narrow “no operation of any importance” would limit the passage of material had been reported in that sector which would be under constant ail | yesterday. attack. In Africa the Italians said their| The grant to forces continued to hold out at right to send Keren. natives in northern Italian A maliland had revolted against the German depots. but it would not few Italians left in that region, (affect the: problem of getting In London, the Exchange Tele- Subplies over graph Agency reported the capture lains into Greece. of large numbers of Itadan pris- could not enter Greec oners from the Keren {ront. Vardar Valley, which
yermany of
supplies
is
Anglo-
and would be blocked by Greek forces. The military situation, tonerefore, ‘as long as the Vardar Road remains closed, must be complicated and unte- [certain for Hitler's troops. The Fuehrer has large numerical su: periority over the Greeks and Brit“MIDWEST WEATHER (ish, but he can use only a limited Indiana— Fair tonight and tomorrow; number because of the mountainous little change in temperature [terrain in eastern Greece, and few Iinois—Fair tonight: tomorrow cloudi- | achanized units.
OFFICIAL WEATHER
U. S. Weather Bureau
INDIANAPOLIS FORECAST—Fair night and tomorrow; little change in tem. perature: lowest tonight about 30.
1) 4
YOU'LL BE BETTER SATISFIED WITH A “WEARINGTON” We're speaking here of HATS—and we're talking ahout VALUES that are beyond anything you would expect (We mean it)
53
Plenty of shades—
Failure to stop at
ness in west portion, fair in east portion; . . TT . —“ little change in temperature. This fact explains why the Greeks
Lower Michigan Fair tonight and teo- pemain obstinate in facing German MOrFOw: itle chanfe In temperailure, threats. If they and the British
in - Fair tonight and tomorrow; ta f ot Aen Fikes tonight. fight on the defensive, Hitler will
Kentucky Fair and colder tonight: to- find the Greek nut hard to crack,
JlolfoN Hasuy cloudy, colder in south... 4 may break his teeth on it.
col | jang is Fed i f Civie Clubs, Here Is the Traffic Record Baa Fe Washing in, 7:30 County City Total B, 10 16 17 36
TOMORROW
Chinese Room,
MEETINGS satassansans 19 Indiana Poetry Society, Hotel Washington, 2 p. m. Green Township School boo Room, Hotel Washington,
March 20— THURSDAY TRAFFIC COURT | Brotherkiond of | Lacometive
Cases Convic- Fines 6:30 p. m.
So Hs tied dian paid} MARRIAGE LICENSES : i " 13 | (These lists Are from official records Reckless Driving § 3 i in the County Court House. The Times therefore, is not responsible for errors in names and addresses.)
19540 1941
Dinner, Bam6:30 p. m. Engineers, Washington,
2
through street 10 Disobeying traffic oN : id James Utter, 27, o . New Jersey: Sighals : 3 wi Mary Katherine Henry, 30, of 1333 I Drunken driving. 2 in All others ......21
—
sreasss D8
/. Robbins, ; Sylvia Elizabeth 902 N. Pennsylvania. $160 | Samuel Bohard, 24, ‘of 1305 Union; Clara ¥ Nefouse, 23 of 1141 S. Illinois | William F. Wilson, 26, of 1315 W. 31st; {Mary C. LeMasters, 20, of 152 S. Spencer. MEETINGS TODAY | John H. Thompson, 67 £, 512 E. 8
y of, ‘ Si Chi. luncheon Clair; Minnie L. Pryor, 61, of 512 E. St. Sigma ‘ '
Canary Cottage, Gair. noon Exchange Club, luncheon, Hotel Severin,
Newlin, 20, of
Totals
James Carnell McLin, 26, of lin Place; Mazelle Blewitt, Northwestern, 2
2808 Frank28, of 2728 Optimist Club, luncheon, Columbia Club, | noon
Reserve Officers’ Association, dinner,
Stegemeier Cafe, night. Phi Delta Theta, luncheon, Canary Cottage, noon 23, 1
including KHAKI | L. STRAUSS & CO. ic. THE MAN'S STORE
| |
| "Shel
Kermit Everett Perry, Of 226 . Michigan; Edith Mae Noell, 28, of 816 E. 14th. | Sidney Charles McDonald, 24, of 1517 Howard: Marion May Schwomever, 19, of . 1918 Sugar Grove Delta, luncheon, Columbia | john Lewell Cole, of 1858 N. Penn- . svlvania; Mary Opal Steel, 235, of 6135 Stamp Club, meeting, Hotel Central. p. m, Jan Samuel Lucas, 29, of 4855 PlainKappa Sigma, luncheon, Canary Cottage, field Ave.: Beulah Mav Pedigo, 18, R. R. noon. 7. Box 200. Indianapolis. Indiana Section, Society of Automotive 1 Kuhlemier, 27, Illinois; Clara Engineers, dinner meeting, Hotel Antlers, 40. linois. 6: p. m. . Andrew Lomen, 27 of 509 S. Harris; thdianapolis Chapter, American Welding 320 N., Noble., , Society, meeting, American United Life Insurance Company auditorium, 7:30 p. m. Purdue University, band concert, Murat
Theater, night, : : Construction League of Indianapolis, annual dinner, Hotel Lincoln, night Oil Co,, meeting, Hotel
ton, all day,
Marie Wood, 23, of
BIRTHS
Girls Hiawatha, Anna ShelByv, at City Donald, Emma Marburger, at Methodist,
ashing- | Charles, Eileen Hurt, at St. Francis,
THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
Swing Away From Axis
fo the British and Greeks, which might conceivably allow them to hold back
eastern | gpposition leaders said This is the major issue at overshadowing
it is Greece to try to help Mussolini out of his open One is along the valley of Jugoslavia whiich forms a comparatively level of the -'was said to have declined to discuss along the Struma River, which pre-
{fusal to allow an entrance to German troops, the fairly easy Vardar
course of trying to send his troops that his Department had no plans Bulgarian
proThey do not allow fighting and are subjected
If the British and first would offensive casualties and even then might be unable to! firm footholds aiong the
the to A Greek spokes- precarious areas on the Greek side ish officers, were reported today to'man said reports that Greek troops of the mountains, they would enhave been arrested in Thrace after had occupied Tepelini could not be counter a serious problem in getpasses
. tion
the through
The British said Somali Jugoslavia would mean a shortened So- railway route into Bulgaria from
the
the Bulgarian moun- | i The supplies chase and maintenance of the Har-
e through the ison Home in Indianapolis by the 50 miles Arthur Jordan Foundation, the re-
west of the Bulgar mountain passes,
IN INDIANAPOLIS
ex- |
22, of 1733 N. Me- |
PAGE 3
BRITAIN TO GET Rows of Homes are Wrecked 50 CARGO SHIPS In Savage Raid on Plymouth
| (Continued from Page One) |
U S Transfer Scheduled on his house. Six persons ran out;a high explosive bomb blew
. unhurt, six more were trapped in- every window in the house. We were Soon; House Group 0. K.'s ‘side. Two bodies were taken out. unhurt. I was surprised later to : : Mr. Kirke's wife and two women find myself covered by broken glass Money- | : x RO ; oney Aid Bill, friends. who Lad taken shelter be Soon incendiary bombs began . oh falling all around. Three or (Continued from Page One) [neath a stairway, were inside. They
fell on the roof of our house and . .. » . i » . . ge ( SOS ¢ i 0 ro t suitable” for | Were believed dead, under the other houses adjoining. We wen the official crushed stairs.
up to the roof, poured on sand and ta ] hoose a water and extinguished them, Later _ Viscountess Astor helped fight the fo, or five others fell in front and fire bombs. The windows of her
we put out those. | i ‘ “All of us, including the American flag tonnage than now gw, out. hold help, were kept busy. When (exists but this condition was eX-' aAperjcan born member of the! things were at their worst we went (pected to be only temporary because gouse of Common and also Mayoress | into shelter in the ceilar but came (of plans for greatly speeding ub ,¢ plymouth, Viscountess Astor had out to put out more incendiary the ship construction program here. spent the day in her mayoral capa- bombs. | It was probable, the official added. ity accompanying the King and “When it was all over I had no that foreign flag ships owned bY geen, Viscount Astor, her hus- Strength to do anything except to |Americans and not at present op- band, one of the richest peers in the 80 upstairs to bed in the windowerating on American or British trade kingdom. was recovering from ’'flu less room. I slept until 9 this [routes will be transferred to the at their Buckinghamshire home | morning and haven't had time to [American services, partly to relieve Lady Astor, tired from a long look around. I am going Lo do that (the shortages. : . _. day, was dining with her 17-year- "°W. : | Mr. Knudsen said that America's old nephew James Brand, who is . “The strangest sight I saw durproduction facilities could be ex- working in the dock vards and allns the heights of the raid was a panded to make $7,000,000,000 worth newspaper man. when the raid man who came walking along calm(of armaments in the next two years started : ly exercising his two dogs.” for Britain and other Axis foes I’ “We waril out 10 Watch & magni Asked if her story was going to He told reporters as he emerged ficent sight.” she said. “Bombs. in- the United States and told that it | from the closed hearing that Sena- on oi testy ™ II1=) was, she said: u Son ux ool bad cendiary and explosive, and flares. «well. tell them {no hurry aad | tors had questioned him on the abil- were evervwhere in the tiv and the ' m inry up and ity of the nation’s industrial struc- YE SRY ana the eome in. It is not the kind of war ture to absorb such a huge sum for gure were suing on: a that will wait for you. It will come foreign armaments. e were in front watching when to vou" He said that he told the Committee that defense expenditures in| this fiscal year ending June 30, would run about $8,000,000.000 and | that they would be increased 60 or | 70 per cent next year,
oul
“most convoys,
ferred will be {operating in said. | The transfers, he cause an even greater
added, may
shortage in house were house-
Strauss
Says: STUDENTS!
(16 to 22)
Opposes Cut in Funds
] “Sure, we can use it,” Knudsen said of the $7,000,000,000. Earlier, when he and Budget Director Harold Smith entered the hearing, Mr. Knudsen opposed proposals to reduce the $7,000,000,000 sum by making only part of it avail- | able in eash and the rest in contracual authorizations. “We don't have to spend the money just because it is riven to us unless some necessity develops,” | he said. | The subcommittee hearings were resumed as Senate opponents of the | British aid { privately that
admitted fewer than 31 Senators would vote against the appropriation. The final vote on the Lend-Lease Act which authorized the appropriation was 60 to 31, but several of would vote for
program
their number the funds. | There was new speculation about | American naval convoys as Senator Burton K. Wheeler (D. Mont), | charged that “all-out” aid for the democracies means “all-in war for the United States” and ‘chains and tears for the minorities in our land.” The naval convoy raised yesterday at thee« Senate subcommittee's secret hearings on the lend-lease appropriation. Secretary of the Navy Frank Knox
now
question was
the question, | One of the subcommittee members asked Secretary of War Henry L. Stimson what were the Administration’s plans for assuring .jarms deliveries to Britain. Mr. Stimson was said to have replied Mr.
and referred the question to
Knox.
HARRISON MEMORIAL PROGRAM OUTLINED
(Continued from Page One)
Russell Townsend Jr, Ross F. Lockridge, New {Thomas McCullough, fand Mrs. William H, Franklin, Recreational facilities would be established in the National Forest area, connected bv stretches of State Roads 135, 50 and 37. which would be designated as the “Harrison Forest Way.” | Such a forest to the Navy's munitions depot now being established within the area, the Commissioners concluded. The purchase price of $3,500,000 would be repaid in abolition of Federal relief costs and by the restoration of wood working industries, the report said. | Reciting the history of the pur-
secretary; Harmony, Anderson, Schlosser,
would add protecAtlantic Fleet
port sets out that an Indianapolis Real Estate Board appraisal made lat the commission's request valued {the property at $200 a front foot. | An estimate of $225,000 was made by the Commission for the land, buildings and furnishings of the Harrison Home. | “In conclusion, the Commission ‘respectfully commends to the immediate attention of the present Congress the timeliness of this Memorial,” the report said. “The very urgency of our program tof national defense makes most op|portune the conservation of our (vital natural resources, such as re|forestation, both for the present and {the future.”
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FOR GUARDED ON SEA HOLIDAY
Destroyer’s Guns Manned And Depth Bombs Ready; Hope to Leave Today.
PORT EVERGLADES, Fla., ‘March 21 (U, P..—A moderate southerly wind chopping up the sea off south Florida delayed President Roosevelt's departure today for a
10-day vacation at sea. Accompanied by his confidante, Harry L. Hopkins, Secretary of Interior Harold L. Ickes and Attorney General Robert H. Jackson, Mr. Roosevelt hoped to put out this inorning aboard the presidential yacht, Potomac. He boarded the yacht last night but, suspecting that members of his party were ‘fair weather sailors,” decided to spend the night tied up to the dock, The Potomac will be under the constant protection of the destroyer Benson. The Benson's five-inch guns will be manned during the cruise, and ber anti-aircraft machine guns and depth bombs will be primed and ready. The Potomac, hitherto une armed, mounted two 50-calibre mae chite guns, suitable for defense agaist aircraft
four |
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