Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 6 May 1941 — Page 20
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| I The annual inspection of apiaries| ( reate an has been started in several parts of the state, James E. Starkey, chief, BY WILLIAM H. STONEMAN icago Daily mology, reported today. 8 CwictRe This annual checkup of the more LONDON, May 6—The bombs diana is made under a 1907 law. dropping on British provincial cities | juri h st few weeks will be] destroyed. The 1940 inspection re-| oe ¥ a ; ; 4 wis] vealed that less 3 per cent|mere firecrackers compared to what | of all colonies in the + diseased. |of British ministries unless the Government does something big] civilians from these same cities. aN might describe as an “ugly situation” has developed in the case of likely to happen in the case of Merseyside, near Liverpool. Any-|
H less in R to prevent the spread of bee diseases inspector of the Division of Ento- Covyright, 1941. by The Indianapolis Times than 100,000 colonies of bees in In- which the Germans have been | All colonies found to be diseased are | than 3 state were | 1S going to explode under a number ~ 3 and fast to evacuate unessential 3',,% on SAVINGS 3 il JF 80 4 4 What the British themselves shattered Plymouth. The same is body who knows the Irish Knows
OA errant eminence
TE Cia
vined Cities Ugly Problem’
that in the same way it may happen te Belfast. Two items from newspapers indicate just how serious the situation is. The first is a story of the News-Chronicle special correspondent in Plymouth; the second is a letter to the London Times from Lord Astor, whose American-born wife, Nancy, is mayoress of the city.
The man de-
News-Chronicle
| scribes the long procession of auto-
mobiles, full of men and women in
| evening dress, driving from Plym-
outh bound for a dance at a
|1usurious hotel in the countryside, | while along the road a sorry pro|cession of homeless men, women,
snd children begged vainly for
rides. At the same hotel he found 53 automobiles belonging to joymakers
THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
REDS LINKED TO STRIKES IN U. §.
Majority Thinks Party Tries To Handicap Defense, Gallup Finds.
By DR. GEORGE GALLUP
Director, American Institute of Public Opinion
PRINCETON, N. J, May 6.—A widespread belief on the part of the public that defense strikes can be traced—at least in part—to the | presence of Communist party mem- | bers in the labor unions, is indicated today in nation-wide studies by the American Institute of Public Opinion. A majority of labor union mem-
pas Et
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floor. Outside on the moors he bers interviewed in the course of met men, women and children |the Institute's survey concur in this r, LC we a ER This does not mean, of course I give this solemn warning to ) 1, | 'Se, the a hiities at Plymouth,” states that the American public is explainof thing is allowed to continue, terms of Comthere will be trouble.” munist activities. ties to disperse the populations of | sible SO rine war industry centers in the same | things as the aircraft industry, and | en the pis to commandeer cottages and ho- | INST ute y cominodation PUBLIC’OPINION] most nearly “There are certain groups,” he! unanimous blame to all be forced to move farther | Out” defense efforts is being laid— reured, their door invalids, those with no work, and | Rightly of wrongly, the public is children. : . “« a : h { members are far more interested in 1 fo Even Burne Cp y | disrupting U. S. defense efforts than : orien » wal in improving working conditions or monopolized by passengers, might |, tering national defense. children who are now bearing the i , i” ? _ | of questions bearing on the sources burden of the war and whose use lof Qefense stoppages, as of bere casional days of complete rest and | vi¢Wing completed by April 20, 78 Lord Astor might have gone |Sible part was traceable to Comfurther and advocated the now Mmunists, 8 per cent thought not, England's rambling country houses, | undecided or without opinions. which are used by small families of Union Members Polled to homeless refugees, or at least] : . : forced to take as many as they | Institute interviewed several hun|all parts of the country, including ; . . {many who have had personal expeLUNCHEON 10 HONOR | cent gave it as their opinion that : . 0 | Communists in the unions had had STATE 0. E, S. LEADER coon | | In general, voters in the West with the RID-JID Automatic Ironing Table grand matron of the Grand Chap-| West were more veatwy Hoonire ter of Indiana, Eastern Star, wil|in blaming Communists than those BOTH f 0 | ; in other sections of the country. or n y == . be given by Daylight Chapter at lic’s will to see the defense program 2 th n sl | noon Friday in the Masonic Temple, go ahead at top speed. Previous InThis will be Mrs. Wolf's first of-|IS not satisfied to date, and believes 6 1 : {that strikes are the most serious of her recent election. Degrees will pe| the reasons why were not farther | the direction of Mrs. Ruth R. Deni- Back ‘Cool Off son, worthy matron, and Arthur E.;| pareve than two-thirds of the vot"NM ne at} 30 P-m. Iineheon | dustries should be prohibited, and IS. Anna Laufer 1S Junchi€on|ghat a “cool-off” period shouid be | Beatty, Mrs. Edith Whitehead, Mrs. | sats 5 : : vad 7 care mediation could bring the disputing Esther Sink, Mrs. Maud Dietz, Mrs | parties to agreement. | Mrs. Clara Dorrah, Mrs. Edna Wenz beg A re AL i | ; : | public is willing, in addition, to take | Mrs. Ieota Peaper, Mrs. Lena (trong steps with regard to Comary well and Mrs. Marie, yf i were up to vou to decide, archi, what would vou do about the Com—2 Doors from § cludes Mrs. Grace Trick, Mrs. Lil- : : Power & Light { ’ k 3. Cc | Institute asked voters in a cross- ? £ lian Spegal, Mrs. Agnes Singer, Mrs.| «ition of the voting population in Mrs. Maymé Smith, Mrs. Margaret - pel Vaser and Mrs. Anna Schaad. 8% Would Do Nothing - Ee Nearly two-thirds of those inter-
and 50 refugees sleeping on the wandering aimlessly. belief. the correspondent. “If this kind |! the whole strike situation in Lord Astor appeals to the authori- | Many other pos- ¢ : | recognized by votway they have dispersed such| J tels near cities for their safe ac-| indicates that writes. “which would, with benefit | for strikes retarding America’s “all afield—namely, the aged | so far as the public is concerned—at i ses, - 1 . in Some Cases, pre-ychudl age convinced that Communist Party safe seaside or country hotels, now | also be scheduled for women and When voters were asked a Series fulness would be improved by oc-! change.” { per cent said they thought a responpopular suggestion that some of | and the remaining 14 per cent were aristocrats, might be turned over : In the course of the survey the could accommodate. {dred members of labor unions in (rience with strikes. Seventy-one per I R ON M A STER |a responsible part in recent defense Mrs. Louis Wolf, new worthy | Coast, in the South and in the Mid- | be honored at a dessert luncheon t0| There can be no doubt of the pubis combinatic : i I ' | Nlinois and North Sts. stitute surveys show that the public s | ficial visit in the 11th District since | conferred on two candidates under | Denison, worthy patron, at a bUuSl-| gq. have said that strikes in defense |chairman, assisted by Mrs, Elsie, oked during which time U. S. | & | Lida Hanson, Mrs. Anna Schaad, Today's survey shows that the | Thompson, Mrs. Thelma King, Mrs.| unists. The decorations committee In-|pn..nict Party in this country?” the Co. | 3 he i | Nellie Schultz, Mrs. Stella Martin, | iach of thé 48 states. viewed suggested strongly repressive
measures, including such typical suggestions as: “Deport all Communists to Russia,” “abolish the party,” “make it illegal to belong,” or “do away with all Communists and the Communist Party.” ' About one person in 20 wanted all Communists rounded up and clapped into prison, or dealt with as traitors. Only 8 per cent of those interviewed said they would “do nothing” about the Communist Party if it were up to them. This is the same percentage as said they thought Communists could not be blamed for strikes in the defense industries.
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