Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 5 May 1941 — Page 4
"PAGE 1
DEBATE OVER U. N.
STAND INTENSIFIES
Roosevelt, Willkie and Dr. Conant Line Up Against Isolationists While Lindbergh, Wheeler and Clark Demand Isolation From War.
BY UNITED PRESS The intervention-isolation controversy was intensified over the week-end with President Roosevelt and Wendell L. Willkie taking part. Mr. Roosevelt and Mr. Willkie spoke against the isolationist point-of-view. They were joined by Dr. James Conant, president of Harvard University. The speakers for isolationism and against intervention were Charles A. Lindbergh, Senator Burton K. Wheeler and Senator Bennett C. Clark.
national debate carried out in innumerable speeches and
'statements throughout the country. In Ney York, 17
1S DEVASTATED ce military and political lexperts issued a joint state-
Bombs Wreck Nine Ships at ment disputing Mr. Lind-
Piraeus and Destroy bergh's thesis that Great Britain has lost the war Big Warehouses. whether or not she is helped ATHENS, Greece, (via Berlin) hy the United States. May 3.—(Delayed)—(U. P.).—The 2 : . remains of at least nine bomb- The principal speakers wrecked ships are visible in the har- made these points: bor at Piraeus, port of Athens, 4. x
where smashed warehouses and har- President Roosevelt bor works show the fury of the Ger- (Dedicating the birthplace
| These were the stars of &
of
man blitzkrieg that conquered Greece.
Woodrow Wilson at Staunton, Va. yesterday, as a national shrine.) “It
Piraeus is the only place in the jc tne kind of faith (in the freedom immediate Athens area showing any of democracy in the world) for signs of the war, but the damage which we have fought before—for there surpasses that at the French |the existence of which we are ever
ports of Boulogne and Calais during last spring’s blitzkrieg on France. Swarms of German soldiers are in the streets here. Yesterday they paraded two hours before Lieut. Gen. Siegmund Lists reviewing stand in front of the Royal Palace, in view of thousands of Greeks lining the streets.
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ready to fight again. . . . He (Wilson) [taught that democracy could not | survive in isolation. We applaud | his judgment and his faith.” " n 8
Mr. Lindbergh
(Addressing a rally sponsored by the America First Committee in St. Louis Saturday night). “Those of us who are arguing against the war have nothing to gain except the welfare of our country. ... But we (know that the nation is being led into a major disaster , . . briefly and bluntly, we, in America, are not in a position to wage war abroad successfully at this time. “ . . This is the third great nation that I have watched being led into
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war without adequate preparation, and without the true facts and issues of the war being placed before the people. . . . I have seen France fall; IT see England falling, and now I see America being led into the same morass.” ” ” »
Mr. Willkie
(Addressing 15,000 persons at | Nashville, Tenn., yesterday in dedi{cating a mew aircraft factory) “If |
(England can maintain domination ‘of
the seas and obtain domination of the air by 1943, she will be on the way to winning and victory for liberty will come. And if we keep the sea lanes open, Hitler can never invade the island of Britain. ...I appeal to Republicans, Democrats, people who voted for me and people who voted against me to support our national policy so that we may have liberty.” » ” ”
Senator Wheeler
{Addressing a rally sponsored by the America First Committee in Buffalo Saturday night) — “If President Roosevelt will repeat what he saig before election (a promise to keep the United States out of war), if he will repudiate that little nandful of war mongers, and stand by the people of the country in their desire for peace, I will stand with him and work with him.” n ” o
Dr. Conant
(Tn a radio speech from Boston | yesterday): “The question is not ‘Shall America fight?’ but ‘when shall America fight?’ T1 believe we should fight now, for while there seems to be little chance that the English island will be immediately overrun, there is another critical danger before us.” n » »
Senator Clark
(Addressing the rally in St. Louis, which Mr. Lindbergh addressed) : “80 Per cent of the people | are against intervention in the war {and President Roosevelt will be stopped from his desire to intervene, if these 80 per cent will assert their power through petitions to the President and Congress.”
MACHINE MAY TEST HEARTS OF TRAINEES
WASHINGTON, May 5 (U. P.).— A new scientific machine which produces graphic records of sound waves and electrical changes of the human heart may replace the doc-
1 tor’s stethoscope in selection of can-
didates for pilot training. The WPA has announced that a small project has been organized in New York City to explore the possibilities of the new development, known as stetho-cardiography, in the selection of candidates for pilot training under the Civil Aeronautics Board's civilian pilot training pro-
m. “Going far beyond the usual examination by stethoscope,” the WPA said, “the new instrument produces a graphic, simultaneous record of the sound waves of the human heart beat and the electrical changes as the heart muscle contracts and expands.”
MIAMI BUILDING RISES MIAMI, Fla. (U. P).—The Florida State Chamber of Commerce reports that buil permits in the ya area during 1940 totaled $34,767,605.
Now Many Wear
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J. E. McGaughey
MCAUCHEY NEW BUILDING CHIEF
Supervised Construction of Many Important Structures Here.
J. E. McGaughey, 57-year-old Indianapolis builder who supervised construction of many Indianapolis lanamarks, today was elected to the post of Superintendent of Buildings and Grounds of the Indianapolis Public Schools, vacant since April 8. He was named at a special meeting of the School Board. Mr. McGaughey has been engaged in the construction and engineering business for many years and served as superintendent of construction of the U. S. Naval Armory, School 20, the therapeutic pool at Riley Hospital and Foster Hall. Picked From Big List
For 10 years Mr. McGaughey was superintendent of construction for the Bedford Stone & Construction Co. of Indianapolis. During that time he supervised the construction of the Eli Lilly biological plant at Greenfield, Robert W. Long Hospital, Hotel Lincoln, the Diamond Chain Manufacturing Co. plant and World War cantonments at Ft Harrison. Evans Woollen Jr., School Board President, said Mr, McGaughey was selected for the $4500-a-year job after a committee had studied many applications. Mr. McGaughey succeeds Ray Wakeland, whose four-yvear-term expired when the Board failed to rehire him April 8. Graduate of Purdue The new superintendent, who lives at 2927 Broadway, is a graduate of Manual Training High School and Purdue University. He is married and has two daughters, both of whom were educated in the public schools here and at Butler University. Mr. McGaughey is a member of the Irvington Masonic Lodge and the Central Avenue Methodist Church. He is a member of Phi Delta Theta Fraternity and Tau Beta Pi, honorary engineering fraternity.
CLOSER RUSSO-NAZI RELATIONS FORECAST
By HELEN KIRKPATRICK
Copyright, 10941 by The Indianapolis Times PERd The Chicago Daily News. Inc.
LONDON, May 5.—~Russo-German reapproachment is expected to develop during the next few weeks, it is learned from independent sources in London. The war of nerves which the Germans have been waging on the Russians for the last six weeks gpparently has gone too far and has really aroused Russian fears; the Nazis had not believed that it would have that effect. They have decided that it must be called off at once, for fear that Russia will really swing into the other camp. German troop concentrations along the entire length of the Russo-German frontier; the announcement of the arrival of German troops in Finland, and the activities of the German radio produced too great a reaction in the Kremlin, the Germans discovered. These aspects of the war of nerves, coupled with the increasing proximity of Germany on all Russia's frontiers, seemed to threaten to change the Soviets policy ih a manner unfavorable to Germany. Hence, the latest instructions have been to woo Russia again. Russia will be most susceptible to this new approach, Moscow observers believe, and a definite improvement in Russo-German relations can be looked for.
PIPES WHITTLED AS HOBBY HAMILTON, Mo. (U. P).—F. A. Hawk whittles pipes. He has spent his spare time in the past few years whittling some 500 pipes. He has just returned from a trip through California and Arizona and he brought back 25 varieties of wood to be fashioned into pipes.
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CITY MARKS UP SAFE WEEK-END
THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES =
Today Last for | Photography—
Property Taxes JRGE SELECTION = wee, es, | OF BACKGROUND
County taxpayers jammed the County Treasurer's office in the
MONDAY, MAY 5, 1947"
abrasive surface. The paper is said |to take views outdoors and Was a to have been tested and positively bit smaller than the usual 8x10 won't stain or re-act upon the film. studio camera. The whole works comes in a neat| Actually it's called a view camera box, with movable partitions for because with it the film gets the different size film and a space in/same view of your subject matter front for a card index. that your eye gets. You have a Each envelope has space for data battery of lenses of different focal on exposure and so have the index lengths, and a front and back that
Seven Are Killed and Two Injured, However, in State Traffic.
One of those rarities, a week-end without a single traffic fatality or serious injury, was recorded today by Indianapolis and Marion County. Seven were killed and several injured in traffic over the state. William E. Mears, 56, St. Louis, was killed and three persons hurt when two cars collided on Road 41 near Lyford last night. Mr. Mears’ car, in passing a truck, sideswiped it and then collided with a car driven by John Canu, Indianapolis.
Oil Operator Killed James B. Leggett, 42, Vincennes
Court House today in an effort to heat tonight's deadline for their spring installment of property taxes. The Treasurer's office will be open until 5 p. m. to receive 11th hour payments. However, mail payments postmarked before midnight tonight will be accepted without delinquent penalties. Taxpayers mailing checks or money orders must send self-ad-dressed stamped envelopes in order to get their receipts returned to them.
‘LIBERTY IN U. S.
t's Especially Important
PERILED"--CLARK
Senator Fears Dictatorship, At Home in Case of War, | He Declares Here.
Senator Bennett Champ Clark (D. Mo.) declared in a speech here yesterday that the U. 8. did not need ‘am 10 enter Britain's war because we do not need the help | of Britain or its] empire to defend our country. He spoke at a meeting of the| America First | committee in| Cadle Tabernacle, | “My fear is that | we might win a war and lose our liberties,” the
oil operator, was killed yesterday when his car struck a culvert on Road 41 near Vincennes and burst into flames. James Willard, 67, and his bride of less than a month, May Wormuth Willard, 62, were Killed Saturday night when their car was struck by a Pennsylvania freight train near their home at Clayton.
Tell City Woman Is Victign
Mrs. Mae Sandage, Tell City, was | killed Saturday night in a truckauto collision on Road 66 two miles north of Tell City. Simon Goldstein, Chicago, was killed early today when another car swerved off the pavement and struck his truck which was parked beside Road 20 in Porter County. Bernard Woods, 60, Chicago, died Saturday night of injuries received last week in an auto crash at the junction of U. S. 20 and Ind. 43, near Michigan City.
Senator Clark
WOMAN RESCUED IN ROOMING HOUSE FIRE
Fire attributed to a kerosene stove explosion destroyed the interior of a two-story frame rooming house at 916 N. Capitol Ave, with heavy loss, yesterday afternoon. The rooming house was operated by Lillian Berry. Fire Capt. John Pehrenbach and Chauffeur Stewart A. Spangler rescued a roomer, Lulu Haywood, 45, trapped in a second | floor room, Spangler carrying her
Senator said. “My greater fear is that the growth of powers at home may outstrip our measures for our own defense, that the generous emulation of great names between the Churchills, the Halifaxes and the Roosevelts may mean the stripping of our own defenses and the breaking down of our system of Government.” Senator Clark said that instead of the word “isolationism” being used to designate those opposed to dragging the U. 8, into war, the term should be “nationalism, Amer-
dictatorial
down a ladder. Firemen gave no estimate of the loss. :
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icanism or patriotism.”
To Pictures Made in A Living Room
Next time somebody shows you some family pictures taken in the family living room, look at the back ground, It's usually full of as
chairs, pictures, vases, radios, cur-| tains, windows, bookcases, davenports and such, | Some people just won't take the] trouble to move things around so| they'll have a plain piece of wall) paper for a background. That's what | ruins a large percentage of home photographs. Grandma is taken in| her chair beside the lamp with a | photofiood in the socket. Up comes | the print and there's whatnot in|
head like a green bay tree. Instead of taking down the oil painting, it's, left there to jut out from grandma's’ shoulder like a dubious wing. |
Make Background Count
How about those paintings with | backgrounds and detail in the room? | Like Whistler's Mother, for example, | which was painted with some pic- | tures on the wall behind her and some curtains and things. They were arranged into a fine composition. When you can arrange |
| the corner sprouting from Sumas S| |
material and compose as skillfully §
as that it's a different matter. Of | course, you can make pictures of people some other way than with just a plain blank background. You can if you work that material really | into the picture, Make it count, make it compose, Subordinate one thing to another, don't let two objects run idiotically together and form a mean merger. Have masses and lines make sense, instead of a dizzy mess. This | takes a lot of doing so the easy way | for the beginner is to clear a patch of wall even though the davenport is pushed in front of the door so Uncle George can't get back into the house. 8 ” .
New File Offered
There's a negative file on the market which is said to be quite special, i Bach negative roosts in a flap of parchment paper, no glue seams, no
cards. For a beginner that record swing and rise and fall so you can is a good thing. eliminate distortion. It gives you " © » the correct view, Hence, view cam=
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“Why,” someone wanted to know | the other day, “is a view camera| SANTA FE, N. M. (U, P) ~The called a view camera?” |eity council was told in a letter from Some shutterbugs will tell you it's the Federal Bureau of Prisons that called that because you view the its jail was full—of bedbugs. The image on a ground glass in pack. | council authorized Jailer Eppie Mone Others say its because it was used toya to evict the insects
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