Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 12 August 1941 — Page 5
ride
TUESDAY, AUG. 12, 1041 AWARDED FOR | The Kid FLU RESEARCH
Veterinarian Honored Here; National Association Votes Fellowships.
(Continued from Page One)
were a talk on Army veterinary service in defense by Col. Raymond A. Kelser, chief of the Veterinary Divi-| ° sion, Surgeon General's Office. and] a talk on common tropical diseases, of animals by G. A. Roberts. direc-| tor of animal health, Trujillo City! Dominican Republic. | Others who will talk this afterhoon are J. Holmes Martin, chief |? of poultry husbandry, Purdue University, and O. W. Schalm, assistant professor of veterinary science, Uni-| versity of California Rep. George Gillie, who also is a veterinarian, who was to have ad-| dressed the convention this after-| noon, wired the A. V. M. A. that be- | cause the draft debate in the| House he would be unable to ap-| pear. He sald he might be here Thursday. At 3 p. m. tod nhual Women's women attenc were to hear :
\
Mr. Jackie Coogan
FT. ORD, Cal, Aug. 12 (U. P). —Private Jackie Coogan today begins a week of peeling potatoes and mopping Army kitchen floors for overstaying his honeymoon leave six hours. It could have been worse, but First Sergeant Joseph V. Crumpley made allowances because Mr. Coogan, former child movie star, is a good soldier and had an understandable alibi. “You can't work a man over too much for being a couple of hours late returning from his honeymoon,” Sergt. Crumpley said, ordering Mr Coogan on kitchen police duty for a week, during which he is forbidden to leave the post. He married pretty, blond Flower Parry, 19, in Nevada early Sunday. Coogan said he and his bride spent Sunday night in San Francisco and parted early vesterday morning, she returning to Hollywood to resume her acting and dancing career; he, to Ft. Ord.
KNOX AGTS TO END TIEUP AT SHIPYARD
(Continued from Page One)
of
ay, following the anAuxiliary meeting, | the convention | talk on “South Amer-| ica—ga Land of Contrasts” by Julia Bock Harwgod Native costumes were to be modeleg during the talk. |
3
Dance Tonight
H At 7:30 o'clock this evening the] president's reception and dance wiil | be held in the Egyptian Room, Mu- | rat Temple. The House of Representatives, | A. V. M. A governing body, last night voted to establish a series of $1000 research fellowships to en-| céurage young veterinary scientists in the field of research. The fellowships, which will be awarded research institutions and veterinary colleges in the U. S.. will] be under the direction of a research | council of the association. The House of R entatives aiso| established 1 award to be| known as the “American Veterinaty| Medical Association Humane Act] Award.” The award is to be pre-| sented to a boy + girl under 18 who, in the opinion of the A. V. M. A. does the o1 1ding act of hn mane kind animals. Th at future convent The governing body also set up a commitiee of five to test and ap-| prove dog foods { materials. The mill is working on In a special report of the Horse 2.000000 yards of uniform cloth for and Mule Assoc . Dr. T. A. Sig-| the Army. er of Greencastle, Ind., asserted that| ¢ Intervention by the OPM and war in Europe is making America|the U. S. Department of Labor to the center for breeding of pure bred settle an A. F. of L. strike at the draft horses such as Belgians and propeller plant of the CurtissPercherons. He also said that fuel| Wright Corp, at Caldwell, N. J, and machinery requirements of this| was forecast by union officials. The country’s defense effort will throw|company admitted production of more and more dependence upon|Wwar plane propellers, already draft animals for farm work In a report to the Executive! still. Board, Dr. R. R. Birch reported a! 5. The Steel Workers Organizing steady advance in the fight against Committee (C. I. O.) called a strike
Ot Qing n conne award is 1 Hine
act usetion with | to be given i | i
“Bangs Disease” in cattle. He said | at the Bessemer, Ala, plant of the | charge here, said that Baecker had |in a struck Curtiss-Wright plant at] that 391 eounties in 23 states have| Puliman-Standard Car Co. charg- confessed verbally to the charge of Caldwell, N. J., and that cartridges modified accred-|ing indiscrimination and refusal to soliciting skilled American workmen cannot The plant for employment in German factories [such as is held underground by the
been classified as © ited,” 83 of which have been added negotiate a contract. to the list in the last year employs about 1100 men and is said Dr. CHLff D. Carpenter of Ft [to have orders for defense railroad Wayne, Ind., chairman of the Poul- | equipment. try Committee of the A. V. M. A.,| 6. An independent union walked declared in his annual report last out at two factories of L. O. Koven night that “now, as never before, the | & Brother at Jersey City, seeking veterinary practitioner is counselling] a written contract instead of a With the American farmer in mat-| verbal agreement with the firm, ters of breeding, feeding, sanitation! which has $1.000000 in orders for and disease control in poultry.” | naval equipment. He pledged full co-operation of Defense officials at Washington the organization to Secretary of said it was “very likely” Secretary Agriculture Claude Wickard’s re-| Knox would accept Korndorfl’s offer quest te Increase poultry meat and to hand over the Kearny plant, egg production as an important where work is halted on $493,000,000 national defense measur | worth of war and cargo ships.
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Reserve Board to Restrict Bank Loans, Tighten Private Terms. (Continued from Page One)
implements, will be exempt from the initial regulation. Officials declined to reveal in advance of the discussions, methods by which the controls will be exercised. Previous statements have indicated, however, that they would include a requirement for a larger down payment, a reduction in the time allowed for payment, and restrictions on bank loans to financing companies.
T0 BE GURBED|
THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES Defense Strikes Near Peak; OPM Says 22,000 Men Idle
By FRED W. PERKINS Times Special Writer
NTN Evid pporti the Army's ; cia ust idence supporting th ‘my Oihey Desk: 1A © Getanae Isa claim that the situation is serious strikes appears to be coming up, |was contained in today's weekly rejust as America’s production ma-|port of the National Defense Mechine is beginning really to roll out asm on Bound or - 4 e ediation oard reporte the a OV [i hree weeks ago that its calendar jas clear. Today it announced its] The chart that | most crowded calendar to date.” | shows labor in- A large part of its load was five] ter ruptions to cases certified to it last week, in-| defense produc-| volving interruptions to shipbuild- | tion is making a/ing in Texas, forgings for planes] sharp upswing.|and trucks in Illinois, electricity for | The line is not defense projects in the New York)
yesterday at New Mexico mines of the Nevada Consolidated Copper 12. —An-| Co.
new and |
Navy. |
ous peaks in Army munition warehouses, March, May and | cotton goods for the Army. June, but: ig a
Thus a housewife contracting to purchase a vacuum cleaner on the] installment plan might be required to make a down payment of $40 on the total cost of $80, instead of $10 as heretofore. Also, she might be] required to complete the payments in six months, instead of 12. She could, however, purchase the cleaner on her open account at the department store without any restriction. Officials said that if the volume of open account purchases of durable goods becomes too great the restrictions could be extended to cover them. Autos Hardest Hit
Small personal loans from banks would be subject to regulation, it was explained, if the funds are to be used to purchase durable goods. Thus it may become more difficult to borrow money to pay for a new automobile. Officials indicated that the regulations will affect the automobile business hardest because approximately $2,500,000,000 of the $7.000,000,000 in outstanding installment] accounts represents automobile sales. To facilitate co-ordination of the Board's functions with other phases of the national defense program, Mr. Roosevelt named a liaison committee composed of Secretary of the Treasury Henry Morgenthau Jr, Federal Loan Administrator Jesse)
Jones and Price Control Chief Leon | Henderson.
CHARGE U. S. LABOR SOUGHT FOR NAZIS
DETROIT, Aug. 12 (U.P) —Federal Bureau of Investigation agents today held August Baecker, 52, De|troit, on a charge of aiding and |abetting the German Government (by illegally soliciting skilled Amer{1can craftsmen to work in Nazi fac- | tories. | Baecker was charged with taking orders from an attache of the Ger-
] : in- man Consul General in New York is a minor percentage. The Army sufficient, was virtually at a stand- | without registering as a German reply is that many of the
| agent in violation of the 1917 reg- | istration act. ! | John S. Bugas, special agent in!
during the years 1938-39. |
|
What Mein Kampf Means to America—
So Mad Is Hitler That He | Covets the Entire Planet
{
|
(Continued from Page One)
| {
their superiority? It then becomes vital to consider the ethics of their particular cult. a 2 o
Naziism Not New
NO READER of Mein Kampf can miss Hitler's disreputable doctrine of the Master Race, but what has not emerged in any noticeable manner is the history of
the ideology that Hitler adopted. An immense preparation of the ground on which the present combative and domineering young | Germany takes its stand had gone forward for nearly a century. German history from von Ranke onwards has had a pronounced selflaudatory character. Hence it should be strongly emphasized that Hitler's ideology is not original. In a page or two of Beyond Good and Evil, for example, written before Hitler was born, the brilliant Nietzsche set down almost all the contempt for the democracies, and all the acquiescence in barbarians, both Russian and German, that underlie the present world convulsion. After a word about the power of will in France, Germany, England, Spain and Russia, and a tart reference to small states and the tedium of parlimentary ime | becility Nietzsche says: “In my | heart I should prefer the cone trary—I mean such an increase in the threatening attitude of | Russia that Europe would have to make up its mind to be equally threatening—namely, to acquire one will,” (the emphasis is Nie= tzsche’s), “by means of a new | caste to rule over the continent, | a persistent, dreadful will of its own, that can set its aims thou- | sands of years ahead; so that the | long spun out comedy of its petty stateism, and its dynastic as well | as its democratic many-willedness, { might finally be brought to a close. The time for petty politics | is past. The next century will bring the struggle for the dominion of the world, the compulsion to great politics.” This astonishing forecast was written about 1885. Hitler was born in 1889. So, fifty years after Nietzsche had written this, it was | to be practical politics. 1 Jd 2 ®
Stripped for Action
BY CHANCE, at that turning point in 1935 or 1936, anyone might have fallen in with an
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Strikes that] #3 affect the Army lost 20.000 manMP. Hillmah days yesterday, in 28 labor disturbances in a score of states delaying delivery of such items as: Cartridges, shells, bombs, airplane propellers, powder and other explosives, surgical instruments for the Army Medical Corps, as Well as
SOLDIER ROPES ALLIGATOR EL PASO, Tex. Aug. 12 (U, P.) —|
| It cost Pvt. Bert E. Snelling of Ft.| | Knox, Ky., $15 to try out the cow-! boy lariat he bought as a souvenir for his brother. He roped a big alligator in E] Paso City Park and a policeman had to help him get his rope back. He was fined $15 for] malicious mischief,
yet up to previ- | City area, fireproofing material for Indiana State J | and | Police Sept.
LASH QUITS POLICE; TRAINS FOR FBI JOB
BLOOMINGTON, Ind, Aug. 12] (U. P).--Don Lash, Indiana dis-
tance runner and until recently an Indiana State Policeman, now is training to become an agent of the Federal Bureau So of Investigation. Lash resigned his State Police job last week and began training at the
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of less urgent character, Each defense-strike peak has brought outeries in Congress for restrictive legislation on labor unions. The new upswing comes at a time when the House is debating whether to extend the service time of the men in the Army.
Figures Disagree
wd
The 20,000-man-day figure applies only to contracts in which the Army is interested. The Navy has] stopped giving out such’ informa-| tion, and refers inquiries to the | Office of Production Management, OPM's Labor Division, directed by Sidney Hillman, gives out only general information, no details. The general information today was that | about 22,000 men, all told, are out on defense jobs, both Army and But since this was said to
Kearny (N. J.) plant of the Ped- | eral Shipbuilding & Dry Docks Co, | and all other defense stoppages, the figure does not seem to jibe with the Army's. Some observers profess to see a tendency among Army officers to talk up the menace of strikes to] national defense, and a tendency in the Hillman division to talk it down. Army Cites Bottlenecks The Hillman division points out] that total employment in defense] industries is 3,000,000 men, and that | 22,000 or even twice that number}
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| aeronautical expert and then learned that Germany had by far | the best air force in the world. | Here, then, in the field of action, | the Nietzschean prophecy about to be tested. | The British, anxious to pay | their way, were trying to balance one set of obligations against another. A railway director, much hampered by the claims of labor, could only sigh, “If it weren't for those old ladies in Bournemouth, we could do so much to improve things.” But in Germany, the old | ladies drawing 5 per cent had either gone to the graveyard or gone to the bottom or gone to work. Germany had stripped for action by the simple method of throwing off all its obligations. It was thinking in new terms, the struggle for the dominion of the world. In the half century that had elapsed between Nietzche's utterance and a Germany equipping itself for airplane warfare, the destruction of our democracy had been decreed. Now what Nietzsche foresaw was undoubtedly the present epoch of fanaticism or will to power. He foresaw the threat of Russia, and he foresaw the counter-threat of Europe. But what part was American democracy to play in all this? Hitler's declaration of war on many-willedness is of vital cone cern to the American,
Tomorrow: “RUSSIA — THE POISONED BAIT.”
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