Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 4 September 1941 — Page 11

\ > NAVY GIVES UP SWORDS HONOLULU, Sept. 4 (U. P).— . Navy brides will have to do without "an exit from church under an arch ¥'\ of crossed sabers, the Bureau of ~ Navigation announced today. . Because of the shortage of steel, «~the sword will be discontinued as a ! regular officer’s issue.

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the

ican production. - The United States cannot send planes, tanks, guns and other vital munitions to Turkey if it hasn’t got them to send. Promises no longer count. Even the British, wisely or unwisely, are openly voicing their disappointment because, they say, thel

merely. a “stream.” Soon, it is believed, Germany 7 will ‘almost cer- Mr. Simms tainly tell Turkey to make up her mind Turkey will be told she can expect little or no aid from Britain ‘and the United States—that Britain wishes to keep her weak because she is strategically placed on the British life line to India, and that Soviet Russia not only wants to gain control of the Dardanelles but to supplant Mohammedanism with Communism. The Germans are already telling the Turks in their broadcasts that in Iran—a Mohammedan country— the Russians are burning mosques. When the time comes to apply pressure, Turkey will have to be in a position to shoot if Berlin does not like her answer. Turkey will have to be convinced that she can rely on a steady flow of new supplies from the United States, delivered ‘when and where needed and in adequate volume.

Yital to Germany

If Russia and Britain stop the Axis along the Volga and the Don and maintain their hold on Syria, Iraq and Iran, Turkey will become vital to Germany. Without Turkey,

the Axis may be doomed. The Axis war machine eventually will stall unless new sources of gas and oil can be tapped and the only available sources are In the Caucasus, the

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in the hands of the Allies. : Turkey is the hub and center of this region—between the Axis-held Balkans and North Africa and the Anglo-Russian Middle East. Were she to side with Germany, or, like Bulgaria, allow German troops ‘to cross her territory, the whole Soviet= British position, from Egypt to India, would be imperiled. The Nazis could attack the Caucasus from the rear. Like a spearhead, Turkey points straight at the heart of the oil fields of the Middle East. She would put the Nazis astride the Dardanelles. With Libya, she woud provide a jumping-off place for a pincers movement against Suez and cut the Soviet supply line via any but the

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Near and Middle East—sources now|

Turks Eye America In Shaping Course

U. S. Can Send Vital in

Determining Stand—Promises Don't Count.

This is the second of a series of articles pointing out how. and why U. S. arms output may be decisive in the present war.

By WILLIAM M PHILIP SIMMS. Times Foreign Editor WASHINGTON, Sept. 4—Turkey will almost certainly be forced into tke war if Russia and Britain succeed in keeping the Nazis out of the Caucasus area by holding them, say, along the line of the Volga and

Wh ther she joins the Axis or comes in on the side of Britain and

her allies depends a great deal on just how And the amount of American aid, of course, depends entirely on Amer-

she feels about American aid.

tenuous and precarious one through Viadivosto

war and is especially desirous of not entering ‘on Hitler's side. Yet it is unlikely that she could successfully resist for long were the Axis to launch a determined attack against her. Her chief hope would be in having the support of a strong, mechanized force and equal or superior- air power. If the Turks had the planes

| Which the United States might have

built—but did not build for reasons

_{too.. well known to go into here—

their answer to Berlin would now

‘|be less in doubt.

Turkey knows that a Nazi victory spells enslavement for herself as well as for the rest of the Balkans. She hopes for a British victory even though she is suspicious of Soviet Russia. She did her best to induce Russia to join Britain’s stop-Hit-ler movement before the war, and Moscow's right-about-face in 1939 shocked her tremendously,

Hitler Must Advance

Turkey will not stand for a German occupation if she can help it. But if Hitler is stalemated somewhere north of the Caucasus, he will probably demand passage across Anatolia. "He must keep on advancing, especially in the: direction of oil, or eventually go down. If Turkey refuses to grant the Nazis free passage, she can expect attack. Turkey’s final answer to Hitler will depend largely on her chances of successful resistance—on the nature of the aid she can expect from Russia and Great Britain, on the one hand, and the material which the United States can ship to her excellent, but none-too-well-equipped, army on the other.

TUMOKKOW—Are Americans slackers?

U. S. MAY OPERATE BIG ITALIAN SHIP

PANAMA: CITY, Sept. 4 (U. P.)— Daniel McGrath, Canal Zone district attorney, today petitioned the United States district court for permission to remove the 23,000-ton Italian luxury liner Count Bianca-

‘mano from the court's jurisdiction.

The petition was interpreted as meaning that the vessel would be placed in- United States maritime service after it is repaired. The ship was towed through the canal to Balboa last week and placed in drydock for repair of engine room damage committed by saboteurs among its crew before it was seized by United States authorities last March 30. The captain, chief engineer and two officers are in the Cristobal jail

‘| awaiting on sabotage charges.

NO BEANS, OLD NAVY|

MEN ARE DISGUSTED

GREAT LAKES, Im, (U. P)~It’s pretty sad when veteran navy men

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who have “practically been living’

on beans” have to get shore leave to satisfy their craving. But, that’s the situation at the U. 8S. Naval Training Station here, if you'll take Lieut.-Commander O. A. Dole’s word for it. Dole, commissary officer, declares that the menu boasts such a variety that navy beans find a spot on it “only about once a week.” And chief petty officers and “old salts” bemoan the passing of the old order.

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‘cates the flexibility of Japanese guaranteed the safe arrival and de- ea RY

Turkey Kn to stay out of the|

: NEW YORK, Sept. 4 (U. P)— FLEXIBILITY—JAPAN | Myron c. Taylor will leave by trans«| Atlantic clipper for Rome where he TOKYO, Sept. 4 (U. P.) —Scores will ‘resume nis duties as Stecial of Japanese ships loaded with |representative at the Vatiesn. of troops evacuated from: Foochow, President Roosevelt. South China, are off the coast of 3

a once broceeding toward! ARRANGE EVACUATION

HOOSIER RE-NAMED HEAD OF PAINTERS

COLUMBUS, 0. Sept. 4 (U. PD. —Lawrence P. Lindelof, Lafayette, Ind, president, and all other high

ranking officers. of the Brotherhood | of: palmer; Decorators and Paper-|{

today were re-elected by unanimous New. Orleans is the only efty bid vote of the more than 900 delegates|ding for the 1945 convention. Saturday, Sept. 6

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an “undisclosed destination” under Cntr of warships, the official| SIMLA, India, Sept. 4 (U. P).— Great Britain and Japan made re-|

news agency, Domei, said today. ciprocal arrangements to evacuate|

The dispatch came from a correspondent aboard one of the ships. [their nationals, authoritative British ships |’

A Domei dispatch from Canton |sources said today. quoted a spokesman for Japanese |will reach Yokohama at the end of | forces in South China that the [this month to remove Britons and withdrawal from Foochow “Indi-|the Japanese Government has I}

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A Value Guide to Canning [A Value Guide fo Canning Savings |

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