Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 4 September 1941 — Page 5

+ THURSDAY, SEPT. 4, SMALL BUSINESS \ GHIEFS TO MEET

Plight of Small Factories ~ To Be Considered at Four Sessions.

® ‘CHICAGO, Sept. 4 (U. P)— Leaders of industrial associations today summoned four meetings during the next 10 days, of Midwestern businessmen and manufacturers to consider the plight of small factories and non-defense industries during the re-armament period. Mayor Willaim H. Dress, Evansville, Ind. said he had asked municipal authorities of 600 cities in 10 Midwestern states, to take .the lead in organizing delegations of labor leaders and industrialists .to attend a conference Sept. 12 to con4 sider re-adjustments necessary in small industrial communities. The Illinois division of the Na- . tional Small Business Men's Association called a “personal contact clinic” Sept. 11 and 12 to bring small manufacturers, desirous of obtaining sub-contracts, face to face|. with prime defense contractors. Although Dress’ conference ‘was set for the second day of the association’s meeting, it was learned at the latter's executive offices that no plans had been made to co-ordi-nate the meetings, but that some of its officers were attempting to reach Mr. Dress.

Seek Defense Contracts Members of the Midwest Manu-

1941:

1, Dr. Hans Kohn; 2; Janet Flanner; 3, Major George Fielding Eliot; 4, Carlos Davila; 5, John T. Whit-

facturers’ Associations, Inc., representing factory owners in 10 Midwest and Western states, meet today to discuss how manufacturers may solve priorities problems and obtain more defense contracts in this area. The Illinois Manufacturers’ Association said officials of: the priorities division of the. Office of Production Management would address a group of industrialists at Chicago Sept. 9, going over the problem of obtaining materials. : Mr. Dress said in a statement issued here that layoffs and business decline may be facing some small industries because of their inability

AERIAL COMBAT

TEST ARRANGED

Civilians to Co-operate With

Warning Service on Eastern Seaboard. WASHINGTON, Sept. 4 (U. P.).

to obtain materials for continued operation. He said his action was taken at suggestion of a committee of eight Evansville manufacturers and businessmen. Cities contacted by Mr. Dress are located in Ohio, Indiana, Missouri, Illinois, Michigan, Wisconsin, Minnesota, Oklahoma, Kansas and Neoraska.

NAVAL BOARD WILL SEEK CADETS HERE

A Naval Board Flight Selection Board from Chicago will be at the Naval Armory here Monday through Wednesday to interview all young men interested in naval aviation. Lieut. Commander Grover B. Turner, USNR, senior officer of the ‘Chicago Board, will ‘be in charge of the Board ring its Indianapolis

—The War Department announced today that the newly formed air force combat command will carry out. large-scale operations along the Eastern Seabdard during October to test the “alertness and effectiveness” of the air raid protection system. The Department said that thousands of volunteer civilian workers will co-operate with the aircraft warning service at strategic points in the areas as part of the maneuvers. Lieut. ‘Gen. Delos C. Emmons, commander of the .Combat Command, will direct the activities of the First Interceptor Command with headquarters at Mitchel Field, Long Island. This group will hold

The Third Interceptor Command with headquarters at Tampa, Fla. will hold ‘similar tests from Oct.

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"Whitaker to Open Forum

aker, and 6, John Mason Brown.

Sunday, Oct. 19 at 8:15 p. m. The series of lectures .is sponsored by the Jewish Community Center Association, and is -open to the public. Mr, Whitaker is a war correNews Foreign Service. He has just spondent for the Chicago Daily returned to America from - Europe, where he reported from all the Continental capitals. The second speaker is to be Major George Fielding Eliot, radio commentator and military expert. Major Eliot will be heard Sunday, Nov. 23. Chilean Leader to Talk Carlos. Davile, former’ Chilean ambassador to the United States and one-time president of Chile, will discuss the Latin-American situation on Dec. 7. John Mason Brown, dramatic critic for the New York Post, will return to Indianapoiis Open Forum audiences Feb. 1. Mr. Brown polled the most voies In a questionnaire sent to last year’s Forum audiences. On Feb. 22, Janet Flanner, In-dianapolis-born Paris correspondent

for the New Yorker Magazine, will

appear. Dr. Hans Kohn, professor of history at Smith College, will’ bring | the series to a close March 22. Dr. |Kohn is a Czecnosiovakian authority on military matters.

_ Started in 1926

The Indianapolis Open Forum was started in 1926 as a civic and educational project of the Jewish Community, Center Association. At the conclusion of each lecture, the audience participates in a question and answer session. Audiences also have an opportunity to indicate preferences for speakers through a questionnaire which is conducted at the end of each session. Season tickets are sold to persons wishing them. This year it will be possible to use only ‘two tickets from a book to each lecture, so that over-crowding may ' be eliminated.

At Kirchbaum Center The Open Forum Managing Committee is headed by Mrs. David Lurvey. Other members are: Milton Abrahamson, Herbert Backer, Dr. Ebner Blatt, Mrs. Henry Blatt, Joseph M. Bloch, Melville S. Cohn, Theodore Dann, Richard Efroymson, Isidore Feibleman, Ernest Fisher, Daniel Frisch, Mortimer Furscott, Richard Glasser, Abraham Goldstein and L. L. Good-

man. Also Tevie Jacobs, Mrs. Allan

‘| Kahn, Mrs. I. G. Kahn, Jack Kam-

mins, J. J. Kiser, Julian Kiser, Max Klezmer, Dr. Bennett Kraft, Mus. Sampel Kroot, Max Plesser, J. L. Mueller, Dr, Bernard Rosenak, William Schloss, Dr. Louis Segar, Mrs. J. B. Solomon, Mrs. Leonard E. Sol-

omon, and Allan ‘Bloom, - general secretary. All lectures are held at the Kirshbaum Center auditorium at Meridian and 23d Sts., at 8:15 p. m:

FLOOR

Noted Specers to Appear At Kirshbaum Auditorium

The Indianapolis Open Forum, presenting six nationally known speakers, will begin its 16th season Oct. 19. Five of the lecturers are experts in world affairs. The sixth: is a New York dramatic critic, returning by popular demand. John T. Whitaker, whose articles on England are now appearing in The Indianapolis Times, will open the series at the*Kirshbaum Center

of the provisional Russian govern-

‘and his henchmen with ‘the aid of

‘mocracies.”

LOS ANGELES, Sept. —. ®).

5 —Marion Sayle Taylor, ‘radio’s “Voice

of Experience,” ‘who has been advising his listeners for seven years on marital troubles, has found the solution to a. nine-mopth squabble involving’ him and his three wives,

; present’ and former.

DOOM OF NAZIS, REDS FORESEEN

Kerensky Says Lasting Peace Impossible If Bolshevism Lives.

NORWALK, Conn. Sept. 4 (U. P.). — Alexander Kerensky, head

ment in 1917, today foresaw the mutual destruction of Naziism and Bolshevism in the present RussianGerman war and predicted that lasting peace 1s impossible without the return of freedom and democracy to Russia. In a statement replying to a Nazi

spokesman’s charge that President]

Roosevelt's Labor Day address revealed him as “a new Kerensky” trying to gain the support of workers and at the same time act as peacemaker for Bolshevism, Mr. Kerensky said the Nazi spokesman had either “forgotten contemporary history or deliberately falsified it.” “I never was a peacemaker for Bolshévism and for a very simple reason,” Mr. Kerensky said, pointing out that as head of the provisional democratic government, he was the natural enemy of the Bolshevists. “In order to install inRussia the full European totalitarian dictatorship,” Mr. Kerensky said, “Lenin

the German government, demoralized the Russian army Jfrom the rear and accepted the shameful sep-/ arate peace of Brest-Litovsk.” From that point on, Mr, Kerensky said, he was the irreconcilable foe of peacemaking between “Communist totalitarianism and the de-

Now, “under the pretext of fighting Communism, Hitler tried to achieve the aim of Gen. (Erich) Ludendorff to destroy Russia,” Mr. Kerensky - declared. “Hitler never will accomplish this. Russia will live forever. “I am sure that the fratricidal fight between the two totalitarian dictatorships, Naziism and Bolshevism, will end by the destruction of both and the installation in my country .and all Europe of a new democratic order which will never make peace with any totalitarian tyranny.”

SUBMARINE TENDER

DAMAGED BY FIRE]

CAMDEN, N. J., Sept. 4 (U. P.).— Fire today damaged the engines and generator of the submarine tender U. S. 8S. Teak, which is nearing completion -at the John H. Mathis Shipbuilding Co. yards. ° The $500,000 vessel, launched a month ago was damaged only slightly, officials said. Firemen ex‘tinguished the blaze which started in a tarpaulin covering the damaged

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