Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 22 October 1941 — Page 4
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Pe Wea hi t. we must do; by giving new an. to’ our educational protwo so ! Ek vital force for the preservation of .demacracy-—chil-gre and the home-=will not be lost gaining the immediate wider i of ‘action for the individual
“It is important that Women not.
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-|lems for Superintendents.”
| teachers will be. at 1:30 p. morrow at the ‘following Dior
| pool;
| Building a hearing into charges of
| (Hell * Bent)
Washington. - The State - Senator ~ Jcalled’
fhe American oh J rahor
lives but that they he success-
all national problems. For this, new
are needed.” .', Superintendents Meet The Teachers’ “Association con
start . tomorrow night in the. Cadle Tabernacle.
The county su rinfendents also heard Dr. Charles H. Judd of the]: University of Chicago, discuss “What Changes in Curriculum Will Result from the National Program for Dee fense.” This afternoon's speakers - oo) clude Dr. C. T. Malan; State superintendent of public instruction. Dr. Malan will describe “Some Practical Problems ‘of County ® School Administration.”
District Meetings Set
‘The City and Town superintendents this afternoon will hear Dean E. W. Jacobsen of the University Pittsburgh School . of Education speak ‘on “Telling the Public.” Frank Stafford of the State Health Board will discuss “Health Prob-
The . district meetings of the . $0
First. District, Palm Room, Clay= 8econd, - To n- Hall; Third, Parlor A, H : Lincoln; Fourth, Club Room; Claypool; Fifth, Cadle Tabernacle; Sixth, Cadle Tabernacle; Seventh, War Memorial Auditorium; Eighth, Y. M. C. A; Ninth, 'Y. W. GC. A.; 10th, Cadle Tabernacle; 11th, Assembly Room, Claypool, and 12th, nacle.
GEORGIA HATCH ACT |: HEARING 1S MOVED
ATLANTA, Ga., Oct. 22 (U:-P). —Representatives of the United States Civil Service Commission, saying it was necessary “to find adequate police protection,” sought today to transfer to the Federal
Hatch Act violations <by seven Georgia officials. Commission Examiner James A. Irwin decided to move from the State Capitol after the President of the Georgia State Senate,:H. B: Edwards, told him, “you are.in my state now and you are going to do things our way.” ~ Mr. Irwin refused to permit Senator Edwards to appear as counsel for one ‘of ‘the defendants without approval from the Commission af
Irwin to “come outside ‘and The vn Th ‘members of the § Department - charged” with violations ‘of the act in connection with alleged campaign fund contri-}{’ butions, - include J. E. B. Stewart, Unemployment . Service Bureau commissioner, and ‘Ben T. Huiet,
only make successes of their own |: fully the lives that are entrusted to} them. We must aid women to play|: |this part in the preservation of ‘a |. democracy by bringing to them a}! live and intelligent consciousness of | |
educational media and ‘techniques i
vention will open with departmental | li meetings ‘ of the; 30. Or “more -di=| visions. : The general : .sessions will}
Cadle Taber-|
Nails. gi vital pi
Capt. Vincent Arkins of Peekskill, N. Y., skipper. of the freighter Lehigh, Sunk in the South At< antic, ‘was : reported safe today after 22 members of the créw | had reached Freetown, British | West Africa.
BRITISH REFUSE ‘SECOND FRONT
Russians Report. Germans Halted All Along ‘Eastern Front. (Continued on Page Three)
16 ‘more members of an alleged Communist terror group had been tried and executed on order of a Rumanian military = court. . Four death sentences were reported from Bulgaria, where a number of military and. civilian officials including a district governor were ousted due $0 .violence in Thrace, and one from | Belgium. The Moscow radio said that steadily increasing sabotage in Bel"“jgium, particularly ‘in “fabric work’ for he German Army, had resulted|. B00 arrests in Antwerp in the Inst week. Twelve workers suspect‘ed of killing two German “officers were * ordered tried week, it added. --A-British- roadenst; heard by the Columbia Broadcasting - System in New ' York, quoted three Serbian officers arriving in Cairo as saying that the Germans were compelled to keep. six or seven divisions (probably 175,000 men) in..former Jugoslavia because of persistent attacks by any army : of guerrillas with headquarters in the mountains of Bosnia.
British Bomb Naples In addition to the shadow army
of terrorists’that is for¢ing the Ger-|-mans to fight on two fronts at.the! Marshal Henrl Philippe Petain has most critical stage of Hitler's drive against’ Russia, the Royal Air Force renewed. heavy bombing: attacks on Bremen and ‘the French invasion | consultative : council, which recombases, ‘including Brest and Lorient,
and struck at the Italian city. of} Big" fires ‘and widespread damage Were reported at Naples, a d industiial center, ia Sons: Were reported | killed and 2 injured, : London said the glow of Vesuvius, which cannot be. blacked-out, had guided the ‘pilots to Naples. The Luftwaffe again raided the
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‘| will be’ carried out will remain ‘to “| be seen if and when British troops
| ever, that any such move would Have
‘| vide an excellent page J for k Spefations
BAAN TASK {HOLD NEAR EAST
That Alone Makes Talk of ‘Invasion’ Nonsense, Says Stoneman. (Continued from. Page One)
|ments have considered plans. for a !
joint front in defense of the Caucasus; whether or ‘not those ‘plans
go into action. It does seem, how=
to be made within the next month. Defense of the. Caucasus presents the British with a difficult problem because fhe Germans hold an in-
terior’ line from which. they .can strike in’ any ‘or all three directions, First, they can strike at Cyprus and then at Syria which would proagainst any point- in the Middle East. : Second, they could drive along the southern shore of the Black Sea, through Turkish territory, with Ba~ tum as their first goal.:
Finally, they may be able to advance southeastward through Ros-tov-on-Don and North Caucasus, in a | direct drive on the oilfields of fos and Baku. . .
Due fo their limited resources of
must spread their forces’ carefully and always with an eye to the protection of Syria, Iraq, Palestine and Egypt itself. No move could be made into the Caucasus without leaving ample forces in Syria to protect the rear and flank. In view of the importance’ of the Caucasus anc the danger which now threatens if, recent agitation inthe British press for a British Expeditionary Force to the Continent appears little short of nonsensical. It is now agreed that such an expedition .could not .possibly i off any sizeable forces from the Russian front, for the simple reason: that the Germans still have ample: forces in France and the Low Countries, totaling: 40 divisions in all, It is also generally agreed: that it would be suicidal, even though shipping. were available, which it is not. It is calculated ‘that transport of one ‘infantry division requires some . 30. ships ‘of 6000 tons for equipment and supplies, and six more ships of 2500 tons for person-
men and. equipment, the British{®
eal of Wa 22 Missing o (Continued from Page. One}.
velt's: position by re-reading the message. Hear Opposition Senators But his action eatme at a Moment
oppesi Senator David A. Reed (R. Pa.).
grow on the reader.
Senate Foreign Relations Committee’s secret session, he told newspapermen that he favored retaining’ the ban on arming merchant
bill as a’ “step toward war.” Senator Gerald P. Nye (R. N. D)), isolationist leader, who was stand. ing beside Mr, Reed, asked: “A step or a jump?” ; “A sort of sideways “movement,”
Administra pedoed the two. boats. Retaliation Urged ' “Two. ships for every American
ship lost” demanded Senator Claude Pepper (D. Fla.).
“An armed ship has a chance; an|
ate and er a Secretary of the Navy Frank Knox said in a radio address that the only hope of peace lies in “the brutal necessity of countering . . force with force.” The armed ship- resolution prob-
nel.
FOURTH “HEPUBLIC ‘DRAFTED IN FRANCE]
VICHY, France, Oct. 22.(U.P.).—
received - the final draft of:a constitution,’ drawn up by ‘a ‘special
mends: wtablishment of the Fourth.
Petal Powers “#8 Chie or State; it was understood: today, |
Informants sald Petain. may enact it, change it or Jeject the proposal.
The: Gérman-controlled . Paris press was alréady attacking the plan on the ground that it was inapplic-| able so long as some of the 19 provinces in- which France woud | Je divided, as in eld: monarchy da were. still occupied by the ia It was reported : that the commission advised that the power of the present regime be. limited by setting the S5-year-uid Marshal's ferm of Petain at a maximum. of 10 to 12 years. The commission was reported to have been almost unanimous against making France a dictatorship or a monarchy.
DOWNSTAIRS AYRES
itle such as “leader” or “conductor” and that he retain the present title, which Petain himself selected when he took over leadership after the collapse of 1940. It was understood that the commission did recommend that in the right to vote should he, sharply restricted and that Frenchmen should be able to vote directly only for lower councils such as municipal assemblies,
NOV. 11-16 SET ASIDE FOR DEFENSE DUTIES
WASHINGTON, Oct. 2 (. Pom President Roosevelt today pro claimed Nov. 11-16 ss a period for all Americans to consider - their duties and responsibilities In ‘the defense of ‘their country.
for the participation of every indi-
vidual the defense of
‘|our priceless- heritage.” Mr. Roosevelt asked Governors of states, territories and Dossessions to issue: similar proclamations,
Issued at the request of . Civilian . Fiorello
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tion witness today, former
twas some speculation that the Bold
his press conference that the Lehigh | was: torpedoed Sunday night about
Before Mr. Reed went into’ the’
Scene of newest Atlantic ship sinkings. :
4 AXIS, SAYS oo
Defense Agency Issues Plea
To Labor and Industry For Co-operation. (Continued from Page One) mediate work stoppage affecting
|defense came from the Seattle,
. |{Wash., Council of
Welders and
|Burners which ordered a walkout
at about the same time that members of the Senate committee said Chief of Naval Operations Harold R Stark had revealed that the U. 8, Destroyer Kearny was escorting a convoy when it was torpedoed and damaged last week. There
Venture might have been in that President: ‘Roosevelt announced at
ow. miles west of Freetown, South ca. An hour later the State Department revealed that the Bold
torpedoed last Thursday about . 700 miles southwest of Iceland.: ~ None of ‘the Bold Venture’s crew
of 32 was an American. Of that ship's crew 17 have been landed at Reykjavik and the other 15 are missing, L508, Askéd who he thought had sunk} the Lehigh, Mr. Roosevelt told reporters to put on their thinking caps—who did they ‘suppose had sunk it. It was not a British, American, French or Argentine torpedo that had sent it to the bottom, he continued, implying that a Germah submarine had been responsible. Outside Combat Zone
Then he was asked if the sinking—near the coast of Africa—had occurred in American defense waters. He answered sharply that the Lehigh had been sunk in one of the seven seas—the Atlantic. The Lehigh was the sixth Ameri-can-owned - shi registry to be sunk. The Lehigh was the fourth American flag vessel
“of Panamanian
at noon (Indianapolis Time) today at six shipyards busy on millions of dollars worth: of Government orders, “The dispute involves a jirisdictional fight between the welders and the American: Federafion of Labor. Gas Plant ‘Shut Down In the Alabama: dispute, 900 C. I O. United Mine Workers vbted to return to work last night at the Sloss-Sheffield Steel & Irom Co, preparifg the way for resumption - of production today at the come pany’s gas ‘by-products plant, pare
|tially supplying Birmingham, and
its industrial environs. Shutdown of the gas plant, which cut off half the city’s supply ‘and
The harried and rammed Natine Defense SMuauts Boia significan both + the a Ena and the thréat of a C. I. O. walkout in Pennsylvania and the Virginias, made yesterday by U. M. W.-C. 1. O. President John L. Lewis.
Mine Truce Expiring
Mr. Lewis’ ultimatum on a walkout of 44,000 miners was directed to the Mediation Board in fhe form of an announcement that a month-old truce, granted at NDMB’s request would expire at midnight Saturday. Mr. Lewis complied with a provision of the truce by filing a stipulated cancellation notice. . . “NDMB has been conducting hearings on issues in dispute, mainly a closed shop, which the union demands be granted by captive mines. At Ely, Név., the Brotherhood of Locomotive Engineers threatened to strike tomorrow against the Nevada Northern Railroad, forcing a shutdown of the Nevada Consolidated Copper Corp.. The Brotherhood reportedly objects to. elimination, of handling ore at a switchyards en
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