Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 5 November 1941 — Page 5
a a a a
AX BOOED
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booed by a group of pickets, most of whom were women; when he and Lady Halifax arrived at City Hall today to call on Ma or Edward
As the couple started! Hall steps they were by a crowd of about pokets carried placards with “in
y jeered
scribed comments critical of =
the crowd were m United ' Mothers of |
the American Moth whose. leaders were q Detroit police yes Ambassador had ben target of eggs end by a group of women. Neither Lord nor appeared disturbed.
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foreign situation. ' Mr. Shirer was
Shirer Meets Old Friend
Former neighbors and .grade and high school classmates, Miss Mary - Sinclair and William L. Shirer had a chat about old times yesterday when he came here to address a Murat Theater audience on the
a dinner guest at the Robert S.
Sinclairs before the lecture. They were neighbors in Cedar Rapids, Ia.
[Nazi Planes Could Bomb N. Y.. Says ‘Berlin Diary’ Author
(Continued from Page One)
to find Americans living in what he believed to be “a fool's paradise.” He toured the’ nation to study public opinion. In Washington, he talked to many Congressmen and Senators—isolationists and interventionists alike. “When I came out to the Middle West. which is my home,” he 3gid, “I could hardly find anyone as
isolationist. minded as some of our isolationists in Congress.” On the train m Columbus to Indianapolis yesterday, he said, he talked with an isolationist Senator whom he declined to identify. “He told me he was beginning to realize that the sentiment ih the Middle West has changed,” said Mr. Shirer. “There is no longer a preponderance of isolationist feeling out here. In fact, I can hardly find any of it.” In one of his broadcasts, Mr. Shirer “scooped” President Roosevelt on the story that this Government has a document showing the Nazi disposition of South America after the projected German ’ conquest of that continent. He was asked if there is a similar document with plans for the disposition of Nofth America by the Nazis. “We may 3 have it'in our possession,” he said. “But I can assur: you there are plans.” Mr. Shirer warned that: war between the United States rand the AXis is inescapable,
Sure! War Is Terrible
“It does us little good to cry out: ‘Oh, ‘war is a terrible thing,’’ he We all know. tha WL Nor-
-Mr, Shirer said that the United States faces the alternative of going into the war now, with England and Russia as allies, or .facing a Nazi Europe alone in a five or 10-year economic struggle which, he predicted, will culminate in an invasion of the United States. The morale and economy of Ger-1 many are not as good now as a
~lyear ago, he said, but they are in
no danger of breaking down. A great many Germans who have resented the war now feel that the seeds of hatred are so deeply sown in Europe that Germany must con-
«| tinue the war and win it to survive,
EYES EXAMINED ALES 1 Id {31k
he said. Aug. 25, 1940, may have been the turning point of the war. It was
on that date that the British first bombed Berlin.
“For the first time shee Napoleon,” Mr. Shirer said, “war had been brought to Germany. | For the first time, the German people felt the horror of what they had inflicted on others. That smug, Nazi self-confidence w alg morale strained. “But for some reason—maybe it was a shake-up in the British com-mand-—those - night raids ceased. And German morale came batk after a few nights ofesleep without bombers overhead.”
Germany Is Brittle
Hitler.can be defeated only if the United States throws her niilitary resources back of Russia png England, he said. “Germany is strong, b t there is something brittle in her structure that will crack dgainst a firong opposition.” Mr. Shirer compared the situation in America when he returned to thad in Prance just before the war started. “There is the same_co usion, the same false cries of ctatorship against the duly and legally elected government, the same quarreling between capital and labor, and : the same smug feeling that Hitler does not really threaten us,” he said.
“I wanted to shout a warning when I first came back. But I held my tongue until I could find out more about the situation here and I'm glad I did. “I found that the core of this nation is sourid. And that while we hesitate to “give up our luxuries; "| there is now a majority of Americans who are beginning to understand that they must fight to keep their way of life.”
MYERS WITHDRAWS IN DEPUTIES’ CASE
Judge Dewey Myers today disqualified himself in the embezzlement cases involving former deputy county clerks. The judge named ©. M. Gentry, Noblesville, E. R. Stewart, Lebanon, and John B. Hinchman, Greenfield, and & panel of alternate judges from which gttorneys may select a special judge. The four men accused are Thomas Ross, William Beckwith, Frank
Lyons and Philip Early,
It means ‘more than big-scale ah jure. America Is eager to show ifs res
spect for great
our country;
character. Throughout you'll find statues and
other types of lasting tributes to great leaders who have made us a great na fion.51; reminders of American ideals:
When a product has the chance
ter people
respect, they wre
quick to ‘adopt it. The makers of Budweiser have always followed 3, one standard — Budweiser must. always be utterly distinctive in 1
Ask Workers to Go’ Back to Work. | -
all striking welders without discrimination Day shift welders at the Consolida Aircraft Corp, San Diego, walked out today, joining those at Lockheed Aircraft Corp.. and its subsidiary, Vega Airplane Co., both
lof Los Angeles where strikes began
last night. ; Strike in Alabama
At Birmingham, Ala, Charles Price, president of the local
welders had struck at the Ing
Iron Works, Birmingham, Ie alls
Reynolds Metals Co., Sheffield, Ala, at the Tennessee Valley Authority in the Sheffield area and on the Plantation Pipeline project. About 250 struck at the Ingalls works and hampered production of steel plates used by the Ingalls Shipbuilding Co., Pascagoula, Miss, which holds defense contracts worth $150,000,000, The aircraft plants were struck because the National Labor Relations Board failed to act on the welders’ demand for a bargaining election. The Lockheed, Vega and Consolidated plants all hold contracts with the International Association of Machinists (A. F. of LJ).
Long Beach Plant Closed
Consolidated had responded to the strike order by posting notices thav employees obeying it would be “voluntarily severing” employment with the company. Company spokesmen said the walkouts would not affect production immediately, but that the plants would. be forced to suspend operations if the strikers did not return within a week. Extension of the strike to the Consolidated Steel Company’s: shipyards at Long Beach, Cal, yester-
halt construction of ships costing $12,000,000.
Hear Miner Arguments
The dispute also threatened the Todd-California plant at Richmond, Cal., where 1000 welders reportedly notified the company they had withdrawn from the, A. F. of L. The company holds a closed shop contract with the A. F. of L. At Washington, the National Defense Mediation Board went into executive session today after hearing oral arguments for two’ days on United Mine Workers’ (C. I. O.) demand for a closed shop in “captive” mines owned by steel companies. Officials of the steel companies, which have refused to grant a union shop, and of the union clung to their “basic positions” during the hearings. Senator H. Styles Bridges (R. N. H.), said there was a “persistent story in circulation” that the board]. intended “to “appease” U. M. W. President John L. Lewis by recommending that the demand be granted.. The board's findings will not be binding.
Rail Wage Report Today
The fact-finding board appointed by President Roosevelt to study the railway labor dispute submits its recommendations ‘to the President today. If "Mr. Roosevelt approves them, they will be made public. Nineteen railroad brotherhoods involved in the controversy - have authorized a strike if the board's report does not proiuce an. agreement. The Federal Railway Labor Act forbids a strike, however, for 30
days after the report is made public.
thon beet” | Their.
Brotherhood of Welders, Burners and Helpers (Independent) an-| “|nounced that approximately 0001
day forced the plant to close and
END STRIKES
Independent Union Leaders
Town Hall Speaker to ell of Nippon’ S Position i in ‘World Affairs.
Japan's position in world affairs ;
will ‘be discussed by Jamés R.
Young, for 10 years manager of the}
International News Service office in | Tokyo, at an Indianapolis “Town
Hall meeting at the English Theater}
at 11 a. m. Saturday.
Mr. Young’s' book, “Behind the]
Rising Sun,” was published last May. He also has contributed . to several national magazines. Perhaps his best-known article appeared several/months. ago in the
Reader’s Digest. It was titled “You|
Are National Guest,” and was his account of the 61 days he spent in a Japanese ‘jail while accused of being a spy. - Norman E. Isaacs, managing editor of The Indianapolis Times, wil introduce Mr. Young and will preside at the question period at the luncheon in the Columbia Club which will: follow the lecture. Alexander Woollcott, who was oOriginally scheduled to appear this Saturday, is still in London, and will speak in Indianapolis for the series Dec. 13.
MAYOR, GEN, HERRON
* Two boyhood companions got fogether for a talk over old Roni] at Wabash College in the office of Mayor Sullivan at City Hall yesterday. J They were Hizzoner d Maj. Gen. Charles D. Herron, former commander of the U. 8. defense forces in Hawaii, one of the world’s most strongly fortified islands. Gen. Herron retired from the: Army last year only to. be called back into service in the personnel division of the General Staff. The division looks after the soldier’s wel« fare, sees that he’s adequately supplied and places’ men in services most suited to abilities. The General compared the situation in the Pacific to a poyyder keg into. which somebody’s - lighted cigaret might fall at any moment. “The Mayor took his distinguished guest to the top of the Monunien:
him whether the smoke situation had improved in the five years Gen. Herron has been absent from Indi anapolis. The General said that it had.
PLEDGE U. S. HELP TO POST-WAR EUROPE
NEW YORK, Nov. 5 (U. P).— The United. Statese was pledged today to support an extensive program for reconstruction of occupied | Europe and international trade as| soon as the war ends. The program was offered by the American delegation to the International Labor Organization Con-
ference yesterday,
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