Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 4 September 1941 — Page 9
OPENS. LAW OFFICE
“Douglas D. Brown, for 11 years associated with ‘the law firm of ‘Bamburger & TFeibleman; has left the’ firm and established a law||
Must Be Lady |. ATLANTIC CITY, N. J. Sept. 4
(U. P.)~Two Southern belles— Miss Kentucky and Miss Birming=
El 11 Bg it to WAYNE, Ind., Sept. 4 (U. P.).
(Gonitnued from’ Page One) —State Senator Wilbur De Weese
39 of 68 Davies Daviess Eotnty|
‘the real imperalists ‘of America.
Precinct Heads Want. Vacancy Declared. (Continued from Page One)
the county organization choices. In}.
the five other counties, it is reported, the county organizations were not consulted and it is the chair-
men and vice chairmen of ‘thesé|
counties who have signed . the Emison ouster petition. Failure of Mr**Buzan to suppoit a party worker from his own county| for the district chairmanship}: brought the attempt to remove him, Mr. Shephartl said.
View Petition Untavorably Although most of the State:Committee members had net arrived this . mepning when the petition was filed, i ¥fMwas not believed likely that the tition would receive favorable ; tion. Daviess County TepresentaFtives said, however, that they would ‘continue the fight regardless ' of State Committee action. Formation of policies leading up to the 1942: elections®also was on the committee’s program for today, which was to start at 2.p. m. in the Claypool. _ A strongly - worded isolationist resolution, drawn up by State Rep.
Guy W. Dausman of Goshen, was}
to be presented. and - pre-meeting indications were that it would touch off a lively debate.
“%- Believe Action Imminent Because Of the support which the proposed. refolution is said to have gained from rank-and-file party members; it was believed that some action by the committee would be forced during this session. Some sources indicated that an effort might be made to tone down the resolution. Others said a compromise. might be worked out in which the Hoosier G. O. P. Congressional delegation would be commended for its anti-administration voting on war questions. There also were reports that the issue might
be sidetracked by referring the reso-|-lution to a ‘special committee fop|
study. An appreciation dinner for State Chairman Gates will be given by the Republican Veterans of Indiy ana at the Antlers Hotel at 6:30 tofinight. Senator Raymond E. Willis bwill be the principal speaker. Evett Sanders, former national G. Wp. P. chairman and secretary to
J gsmer President Calvin Coolidge, |."
as to arrived today from WashFington to attend the dinner.
- as soon as Roosevelt. doesn’t matter. Your interests in--
_Mwarmonger” —
‘Republican and ‘the are your ‘traditional WAT . party,
“Willkie will take you to war The man
volve you in this war. Either the
mocracies must prevail.” eRe, Between U. S., Germany That is the way Axis leaders were thinking last fall. They . knew that the ultimate and dei'cisive showdown had to come be‘tween: Germany and America — ‘the greatest of: the democracies. “Their: propaganda was designed to
. | persuade the Americanpublic that
it was not necessary or to the in-
“terest of. America to-go. to ‘war.
‘That war ‘was. soniething .Roose“velt personally. wanted for personal reasons. : This was doubly cynical since
one of the most important, of the |
German diplomats told me that Mrs. Roosevelt was a profound pacifist, that she had a great influence on the President and that Hitler felt convinced that Roosevelt would never lead the United , States into war' before America was attacked. The greatest secrecy surrounded ‘Hitler's various talks with Mussolini through the winter. And yet within a few days or weeks of each of them important Germans and Italians knew most of what happened or the substance of the conversations always leaked ‘out. One of the things the two dictators discussed — though certainly not in such disrespectful language—can be illustrated by an apochryphal anecdote first .circulated by an Ital= ian diplomat. “Why can’t you take Malta?” Hitler is supposed to have asked Mussolini. “Malta is an island, too,” Muyssolini replied, according to this wit.
8 8 8
Where Axis Blundered
Facing the threat of an awakening America, which was talking at least about producing armaments in mass, Hitler and Mussolini found that England wouldn’t collapse. When France collapsed both expected Britain to capitulate. en Britain would not capitulate both undertook terroristic® mass bombing. “If: "Churchill were a stubborn the only man who
2oStoed ‘between Hitler ‘and ‘peace—
totalitarian powers or the de- |
. Axis military leaders leave ‘the ruins of a Soviet pallding during the recent 5-day Hitler-Mussolini conference ‘“somewhere on the
Eastern Front.”
Left to right are: Adolf “Hitler, Gen. von Kluge,
Benito Mussolini and Field Marshal Wilhelm Keitel, This is a
radiophoteo from Berlin.
- | Rep.) was free under $200 bond to|day after his arrést last night on ~~ | charges sof smalicigus trespass, driv- : ling while dntoxicated ‘apd. public ho “Miss
- | Weese does not own an automobile,
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the British people, would be bombed into submission. Hitler and Mussolini cared nothing for * American reaction to the mass bombing of civilians because they knew they had to defeat America to win in any event. Their problem was to knock out Britain be-
fore America could enter the war.
Had they bombed military objectives they miglat have starved Britain’ out, but they bombed civilians and that .only raised ‘British - morale to the most stubborn heights ever reached by a desperate people fighting with its back to the wall and alone. Meeting ‘told Mussolini frankly that they were in for a long war and that America was to be their princip:.l foe. He outlined a joint plan. The Axis had to clear the Mediterranean, take the Balkans and the Middle East with Suez. Then Germany would conquer Africa and establish U-boat and bomber bases along the whole littoral of the South Atlantic.
® ” »
Threat of French Fleet
Just as the combination of submersibles and planes was destroyJing commerce in the North Atlantic, so it. would close the South Atlantic. Britain and America together could never replace the .shipping lost. The French fleet
in co-operation with the Italian
fleet and new German units such as the Bismarck would drive commerce from the seas. America would be terrified and to ensure her isolation Hitler had arranged that some time later Japan would join a tripartite alliance under which she would come to war if America intervened for Britain. .. A: long: was plain to seo a0 d in subsequent ‘weeks the
while the Greeks, picked as a pushover, proved a . monkeywrench in the time table. Italian morale was collapsing and I went again to see Count Ciano, hinting that the moment had come for the Italians’ to make separate peace unless they were willing to see the Germans march in and turn them into a conquered province. “Your excellency knows as well as I that time is on the side of the democracies,” I said. Ciano, very serious, replied quietly: “Yes, time is on the side of the democracies,” he said. “Provided —provided there is time enough.”
Isolationists Help Axis
Nothing has so succinctly summoned up the grand strategy ot
"in midwinter Hitler’
Hitler and Mussolini in face of America. They must thank the p American jsolationists, no less .than their own fifth column, that America failed to act in the spring and is failing to act now. The Axis leaders Rave refrieved their position in the Mediterranean and they are now conquering Russian raw materials and wiping out the armed forces on their most vulnerable flank, This is being .done with no interference from America. American production and American morale will never be a threat to the Axis, in the opinion of ever Axis spokesman with whom I have talked, until America has declared war. Until America is on a war footing with a war psychosis the Axis leaders feel that they can keep ‘the initiative. They they will hit America before the country realizes that for a full year it has been denominated by Hitler as Enemy No. 1. “South America will go against you. Your own public will be paralyzed and we will have every country in the world standing with us, Our long-range bombers will wipe out your industrial cities and we will land 25,000 men at a time in your key centers—land them by transport aircraft. “France will look heroic by comparison with America—your fleet . spread in two seas, your air force crippled by fifth columnists, your money-mad citizens scrambling to climb onto’ what you call the ‘band-wagon'. y
8 = 2
Fifth Column Ready
These were the farewell remarks of: an. important Fascist, leader to ‘me-a8 I was expelled from
wi
‘won Oyrenaica and pound= | ¢ = the: Italian fleet at Taranto |
make sacrifices. They won't ration food and clothing and gasoline. They won’t live in training camps. They won't go abroad to die for the liberty you talk about so glibly.” This important Fascist added a personal warning: “Whitaker, you are a fool,” he said. “You could have chosen for us if you hadn’t believed so profoundly in what you call democracy. You'll spend your latter days in a concentration camp in Axfis-ruled America. I'll come to see you then.” “Don’t . bother,” I told him. I'll come to see you in Rome — Ill
n Army.” was five years ago that Mus-
solini said, “we or they.” He meant it, and Hitler means it too.
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toxication,” ‘Cabtaifi “of” Detectives John Taylor, announced. ok x3 ~~ Capt. Taylor. said an. affidavit, filed on behalf’of William Schirmeyer, charged that De Weese drove his automobile into a bicycle here last Friday, and that he was under the influénce of liquor at the time. Guy Stookey, De Weese’s attorney, denied the chafges. He said De
and that the whole affair was a “grudge proposition.”
‘WAR’ TOO REALISTIC
STILL RIVER, Mass., Sept. 4 (U. P.) —A group of WPA workers wondered today why Army maneuvers have to be so realistic after watching a dozen 104th Infantry tanks roll by them and crumble a stone wall, leaving their coats and
. an abbreviated cowgirl costume.
smashed lunch boxes in the debris just before lunch whistle sounded.
A. Your people aren’t the’ Kind to
{ome in the uniform of the Amer-.
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ham-—today held bathing beauty and and talent honors Bb the annual Kentucky,” 19-year-old Slatten,. a blue from: Lexington, won'®:her, —— ‘witha » ‘fds’ bathing. suit’ last night. Virginia C. McGraw, 18, prown’s haired “Miss Birmingham,” earned the greatest applause for her tap dance and rope tricks in
But the contest committee was
America; 1941.” The committee is determined that the winner must not only look like a lady but must talk and act like one. On Saturday morning, the 43 contestants will be taken on a beach party. And, under the critical eyes of the judges, each will be checked at close range for
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