Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 6 June 1942 — Page 7
SG heey
SATURDAY, JUNE §,
942
The Indianapolis Times
SECOND SECTION
Washington
WASHINGTON, June 6—Congress is in a hot fight over whether to abolish the CCC and the NYA. Both of these are close to the New Deal heart. In + his first inaugural address in 1933 President Roosevelt announced the CCC project. The NYA came much later and was the special concern of Mrs. Roosevelt. Both agencies, particularly NYA, have figured in intense controversy. They have symbolized the humanitarian impulses of the
New Deal. NYA particularly has symbolized some of its wasteful tendencies. Both have been tar-
gets of anti-New Dealers. Now they are targets of the economy bloc in congress. The New Dealers feel that to allow them to go would be to betray the New Deal and to surrender to a reactionary viewpoint. Both agencies also represent a large number of government jobs. As usual, those with a vested interest in an established government agency are not ready to give it up without a fight. All of that is unfortunate. It lugs in many issues which have no proper place in deciding the question of whether these two agencies are to be preserved, abolished, or retained in part.
The Need No Longer Exists
THE JUSTIFICATION for creating them in the first place was that there was need for them. They are products of the depression. They provided a way for thousands of young men who could not find jobs to learn or do some useful work. Three million voung men went through the CCC camps, had selfrespecting work, learned a variety of crafts, gave use-
By Raymond Clapper DANGER SEEN Johnny Doughboy Needs Ships FURTHER F000
ful and necessary protection to the national forests.
The NYA made it possible for thousands of young men and women to obtain educations and learn usefui The good that they did probably outweighs the waste and abuses that occurred in loose adminis-
trades.
tration. CCC probably hit a fairly high average in efficiency, far higher than ‘NYA. But if the reason for establishing them was that a need for them existed during the depression when | there were not enough jobs to go around, why should | they be continued if the need has disappeared? It is not a rejection of the New Deal's program to abandon those of its agencies which have outlived their need. To. hang on to them when there is no longer any need is wasteful bureaucracy.
New Deal Is NOT Involved
IN DEFENSE of continuing these agencies it is argued they are doing needed work. NYA claims to be training war plant workers. CCC claims to be doing useful work in the national forests. But the chances are that agencies set up primarily for work relief are not doing that job as efficiently |* and with as little manpower as would be possible through agencies operating solely for efficient work and not for reief. At at any rate this situation involves a principle which can be applied as a test throughout the huge government structure. We set up many agencies because of depression conditions. Now that a surplus of labor has turned into a shortage of labor, the government needs to readapt to the changed situation. If after the war there occurs unemployment, measures
like a weak reason for continuing a heavy overhead a
now. It is hard to see why one's attitude toward the New Deal itself should be involved in this question.
Ernie Pyle, in poor health for some time, has been forced to take a rest. However, he is expected to resume his daily column within a short time.
Inside Indianapolis By Lowell Nussbaum
PROFILE OF THE WEEK: Frank Coffroth Daley one of Indiana's most renowned lawyers, former U. district attorney, Democratic candidate for governor in 1928, co-founder of the Bluffton Evening News, mystery story fan, lover of roses, collector of Hoosier art, owner of a well-stocked private lake, one time crack professional ball player, and close friend of Wendell Willkie. In fact, it was Frank Dailey who saved young Willkie from a political career— and obscurity — right after the other war by talking him out of running for congless—and fixing him up with a job in the Firestone company’s legal department. At 71, Frank Dailey looks and acts a lot younger than most men
his age. He's 5 feet. 11; weighs about 170. His hair is gray and thick; his eyes are hazel, and he wears dark shell-rimmed glasses. He's brisk in his movements; seems to have tre-
ndous energy. Nervous and high strung, he walks i neessantly. About the only time he sits down for any iength of time is when he’s reading, or playing solitaire. He knows about all the solitaire games ever nvented. A good bridge player, he doesn’t like the game because while playing it he can't get up and pace the floor when he wishes.
Chews Up Cigars HE NEVER PAYS much attention to his clothing In fact, he probably wouldn't know where to find a shirt without help. When he was a youth playing baseball, it was the stvle to chew tobacco. He started then and has never quit. He doesn't use scrap or plug tobacco, just buys a , bites off a hunk and chews it. Born in Bluffton, the son of a circuit court.and Indiana supreme court judge, he played professional ball, worked on an Alexandria (Ind.) newspaper, founded and sold the Bluffton News, all before going to I. U. There he played ball four years, and was one of the best. He could do everything well except pitch. And turning a back somersault was among his athletic accomplishments. He gave up his law practice in Bluffton in 1914 to
Red Tape
NEW YORK, June 6.—One of the greatest practical problems facing us today is that of doing business by modern methods and using intelligently the marvelous mechanical facilities around us without the burdensome red tape of other days. I know of one aviation mechanic school where the army administration force for about 500 enlisted student aviation mechanics is greater than the entire administrative staff of the company which owns and operates the airport and rents and cares for the buildings, hangars and airport equipment. I don’t believe any student aviation mechanic in this excellent school weculd be able to carry all the official forms and papers about him and to his course when time came for him to graduate. Washington is not solely responsible for the red Much that goes on in Wash-
clean
a cigar
later
the bureaucracy tapism of this country.
ington merely reflects American business as a whole. It's a Form of Blackmail
MUCH OF THIS paper work is nothing but red tape—a form of blackmail paid to the outworn methods of other days by a new age too lazy to create its own new methods. If the Washington bueaucracy won't delegate authority, neither will American business. I know there are exceptions, but they only prove the truth of the main indictment. Here we are, sitting dazzled in a mechanically-
My Day
WASHINGTON, Friday—I came into Washington early this morning to find a beautiful day. Since there is a new regulation which asks passengers to leave the train by 7:30, one of the officials of the company greeted me on my way out He smiled and said: “At least, Mrs. Roosevelt, we do not have to hurry you off the train. You are always among the first to get up!” Whenever I am up early, I think how foolish we are not to get up with the birds in the summer. The first thing I came across in my mail this morning was a statement written by Dr. Remsen Bird of Occidental college on the present situation facing many of our colleges. With so many students going into the army and navy, ae Oo Mihir mor Jot, ft Sen ie
> 5
become U. S. district attorney here. In his two years in that office he established a reputation for fearless prosecution of political graft. As a result, he later was chosen special assistant to the U. S. attorney general to go to Michigan and prosecute Senator Truman Newberry, the first of the great prosecutions of corrupt methods of controlling senatorial elections.
Can’t Stand a Weed
EVEN TEMPERED, he keeps his feet on the ground all the time. And he never forgives an offender. Anyone can fool him once, as he has great confidence in people, but they can't fool him a second time; they don't get a rhance. He has an apartment here but he lives most of the time at his 45-acre country home near Edinburg. There are extensive flower beds at the home, with more than 850 rose bushes. He's made the study of flowers a hobby, and likes to get out and admire them He can't stand the sight of a weed, often gets out and picks weeds himself in his vegetable garden. Corn on the cob is his favorite food. His favorite form of relaxation is to kick off his shoes and settle down for the evening with a thrilling mystery story. He often falls asleep with a book on his chest.
He Never Cuts Corners
MR. DAILEY NEVER bothered with golf, told friends he had spent “half my life chasing baseballs and I'm not going to spend the other half chasing
'mandate—to build land with open doors
Wy S. ACTING
ON PALESTINE
|
Wedgewood’s Request That
Britain Rule End Now, Holds Dynamite.
By WILLIAM PHILIP SIMMS Scripps-Howard Foreign Editor WASHINGTON, June 6.—Lord Wedgewood’s sensational suggestion that the United States take over
Britain is regarded here as international dynamite. That the way may, likely will, bring some change in
post-war world. But not even the influential American Palestine committee here believes that this is the proper time to raise the issue. Senators Wagner of New York and McNary of Oregon are cochairmen of the committee. Among membership numbering more (than 600 are 67 senators, 138 rep|resentatives, 22 governors and 71 | mayors. Gets F. D. R. Support
Lord Wedgewood is a ranking member of the British labor party. His suggestion was first offered here at the second annual dinner cf the Palestine committee. Expressions of support for the committee's work {came from each of the united nations, including a message from President Roosevelt. The British administration in Palestine, Wedgewood said, had been “too strong for the British parliament and conscience. The whele administration in Palestine, from the top to the police, are against the half-million Jews of Palestine.
No Hove From Britain
the Palestine mandate from Great
and most
|
the status of Palestine is widely: accepted by those now planning a:
TAKE A GOOD look at the chart above, and you will see why shipping has become America’s No. 1 bottleneck. Back in the unmechanized days of 131718, shipping experts figured that for every man sent to France, something over shipping had to be set aside to keep him supplied. Modern war greater tonnage. ures have been released, a con-
(VERE 3s) SRF RE 3)
7”
—
It would take 62 1-2 ships to supply 25000 men in Australia. To keep the same number in Europe would take 16 2-3 ships.
servative estimate indicates that at least four tons of shipping must be set aside to supply every soldier sent the 3000 miles to Europe. To send our soldier half way around the world to Australia and to keep him supplied there requires 15 tons of shipping. The chart above shows how many 6000-ton ships it would take to keep a force of only 25,000 men supplied in Europe and in Australia. Step up this force to a
three tons of
calls for even Though no fig-
IES
one x - quarter of a million men—still a minute figure in terms of the 4,500,000 soldiers who will be in America’s army by the end of this year, To keep a force that size in Europe requires at least a million tons of shipping. To keep it in ‘Australia would take three and three-quarters million tons, This is half the entire tonnage of America’s merchant fleet at the start of 1941.
Windin
at Ba boat
capital. is the only correspondent to make that
years.
Soviet Economy Depends on Caucasus Oil;
Steele Finds Southern Front Well Guarded
journey in wartime Russia, route to the Far East, his beat for many the following dispatch Mr. Steele concludes his thumbnail review of his experiences.
By A. T. Steele
In
up Sine, Moning Ruts 5 correspondent in the oscow-Kuibyshev area and along the Russo-German war |aged with difficulty—and an amiable fronts, A. T, Steele has finall ad after a three-week own the Vol pian and thence ov So far as is known, Mr.
lea, through the Casria
hes [pampered me with good food—for-
emerged
ourney by flow of pro-Soviet conversation.
nd to the Iragian | . Steele |the revolution, but now I am run-
He is en NINg a hotel,” she said proudly.
“I worked in a fish factory before
My copies of American magazines ‘created a mild sensation among the ‘hotel staff who pored interestedly lover lithographed advertisements of
humble bundle slung over his back. Their wives and children gave them a tearful sendoff, such as is frequently seen in Russia, screaming, crying and clinging to their men(folk halfway up the gangplank. Orie woman fainted. “It's a country custom,” remarked one soldier standing next to me. “They take it quieter in Moscow.”
? ; ; Copyright, 1942, by The Indianapolis Times {electric refrigerators, streamlined| Th i icnic. - “There is no longer any hope from “4g the Chicago Daily News. Inc. cars modish wearing apparel and PRLog Bodin aan any British administration,” hel gagpAD June, 6 — Traveling | Am ” erican dgets, and were conwerk on. “Therefore. seek io get gadgets, and e able deck space. Outside my cabin
your America to act—to press for arms and justice—to accept the another free and open hearts. . “I have tried to save for my own countrymen the glory of rebuilding Jerusalem. . ., . It is no use. They won't do it. . . . You must turn to America and take on the job yourselves.” Every American president from Woodrow Wilson to Franklin D. Roosevelt has indorsed the idea of a Jewish national home in Palestine. And as far back as 1922 the house and senate adopted a joint resolution expreSsing the unqualified approval of congress.
Mandated by League
a golf ball.” He never learned to drive a car; tried once, bumped a curb in trying to park, and quit right there. Ever since his boyhood he dreamed of having a nice farm, and a few years ago he acquired it—440 acres near Franklin. He never jaywalks; it's almost a superstition with him. Fond of young people in general, he's particularly interested in his 10 grandchildren; takes one of them, 10-year-old Frank, with him to the farm and even to the office. He has a lively sense of humor, enjoys joshing those on the other side of the political fence. For instance. he once was showing his flower garden to a friend. Pointing to certain roses, he said: “Those are Herbert Hoover roses. Isn't that a hell of a name for such beautiful flowers?”
By Maj. Al Williams
equipped werld which should be administered according to methods of transmitting orders and delegations of authority in keep with the speeding wheels of this mechanical age. Just seat yourself in the cockpit of a speeding plane and fool around like that with a lot of senseless exclamations, while preparing to identify yourself, your ship and your position in the air as you approach a busy airport and want clearance to land, and see how quickly the radio will snap you off and take the man who has done his mental homework, regimented his thoughts, formulated ' the message in his mind and gives it briskly.
Pressing Need Is Delegation
IF AMERICAN business as a whole will not be moved from its morass of printed, form-filling nonsense and paper work, let's see if we- can’t get the aviation business to build its own speed-up, modernized methods for doing 1942-plus business. Appropriations- for aircraft in the current war, together with announced plans for future appropriations, have approached the 40-billion-dollar mark, which is one quarter of all United States defense appropriations in the last three vears. Yet we haven't been able to obtain a unified, autonomous air force. paralleling the autqnomy of the army and navy. It might have been possible to administer the business and the details in other days from half a dozen desks. But those half dozen desks today must be concerned solely with policy formulation and supervision, and the details must be assigned to decentralized subordinates. And this can be accomplished only by the deiegation of commensurate authority.
By Eleanor Roosevelt
One small college in Iowa, Iowa Wesleyan college of Mt. Pleasant, Iowa, is the oldest college west of the Mississippi. It is actually older than the state of
lit was to Great Britain that the
per cent of the Jewish population] ‘in central and southern Europe is
ZOLLMAN IS NAMED
Yet, at the request of the Jews,
League of Nations entrusted the] Palestine mandate. Hence, it is felt here, action now along the |lihes proposed by Wedgewood would be impolitic. Nevertheless, reports received | here indicate that never in history have the Jews of Europe stood in greater need of asylum. Information reaching Dr. Chaim Weizmann, president of the World Zionist organization, reveals that about 25|
doomed. This means, according to| Dr. Weizmann, that between a million and a million and a quarter Jews in $hat area must die.
CHINA EXPECTS U.S. T0 SEND BOMBERS
CHUNGKING, June 6 (U. P.).— Informed Chinese sources believed today that the United States is planning to send big-scale reinforcements of bombers and fighter planes to China. These planes, it was said, would be manned by American pilots and serviced by American ground crews. It was understood Chinese and American officials in both Chungking and Washington have drawn up such a program to implement
President Roosevelt's promise to provide more air assistance to China,
The extent of such assistance was not known here, but it was thought possible the United States will establish a large air force operatic: within the China war theater under direction of Generalissimo Chiang Kai Shek. Chinese circles claimed adequate aerial support would enable the Chinese to halt the Japanese offensive in Chekiang and preserve vital areas in that sector.
down the Volga and visiting the|vinced. Caucasus you always are conscious | sure, that such things are within of the great reserves of unexpended|the reach of only a few privileged manpower Josef V. Stalin is main- capitalists and not the masses of ( taining at the rear of his southern |the American people. { front to frustrate Hitler's embitions} in that direction. At one big city, 200 miles behind| the Ukrainian front, military activi- Russia, away from the centers of] [their experience philosophically, ty is as intense and troops are as|the bureaucracy, {numerous as though it were the im- friendly people overwhelming
Mr. Steele
like most Russians,
Simple, Friendly People
Wherever you travel in
| you meet simple,
theater | their hospitality. | exception.
mediate of operations. How Stalin is] utilizing this nu-|the Soviet Union but all of it goes merical strength elsewhere. I couldn't find a single to combat Ger- | sturgeon egg. man superiori-| The little ship on which I did a ty of armament 500-mile, two-day, trans-Caspian was well demon- | journey to Baku was designed to strated recently|carry a few hundred passengers but in Kharkov,jwe were bulging with 1000 men, where the Rus-|/women and children when we left sians sacrificed | Astrakhan. Most were Red army tens of thou- casualties en route to the Caucasus
I am
interior
in Astrakhan was no!
Astrakhan is the caviar center of
sat, ate and slept a trio of ragged, bearded hearties who appeared at my window at intervals soliciting a pinch of tobacco, a crust of bread or a match. They said that they had just been released after doing time in a prison labor camp in the (forests of the north. They took
Need Caucasus Oil
“Oh, it was cold,” one said. “Six-ty-degree frost. But guess we Russians can stand it better than Fritz, eh. Could you spare another cigaret?”
Russ
countered a fleet of anchored | barges and ships. This is the place! where oil from the Caucasus is| transferred from tankers to barges for towing up the Volga to the heart of Russia. It is extraordinary how extensively the Soviet Union’s war economy is nourished by and de-
Somewhere in the Caspian we en-|
sands of men, against an estimated! for convalescence.
concentration of 30 German divi-
| locating and delaying the planned
| Nazi offensive against the Caucasus.
Visits Caviar Center
At Astrakhan, medieval Kremlin city where a hot dry wind blows] | ceaselessly, filling your room, mouth |
a ship to Baku. The militia put me
{up at the venerable “New Moscow hotel.” where the kindly manageress ‘casian training camp, each with a
Grotto to Hold Frolic at Park
Sahara Grotto will open its annual “frolic week” Monday at Riverside amusement park. The Sahara Grotto band, directed by Harry Duncan, will play nightly from 7 to 9 p. m. and all rides and games will be half price. Ten high school bands will play a mass concert next Friday evening and in addition there will be bands representing Danville, Zionsville, the Johnson county 4-H club, Jordan conservatory, Washington township grade school and the boy scouts. Prizes are to be given for outstanding performances. Five uniformed Sahara Grotto bodies will be on hand nightly. They are the drill team, drum and bugle corps, the cast, revelers, the Amerten Legion Post 264 and the band.
NAMED TO NAVAL ACADEMY BLOOMINGTON, Ind. June 6 (U, P).—James Farner, 19, former South Bend central track and basketball star and a freshman at Indiana university, has received an
MAYOR OF BEDFORD
BEDFORD, Ind. June 6 (U. P.)). a Maurice Zollman, Democrat, was |
named mayor of Bedford by the city council last night to succeed |
{Clarence J. Donovan, former Notre Dame basketball captain, who re-|
signed recently to join the army air
Ps. Mr. Zollman is the Democratic
Towa and will celebrate its hundredth anniversary nominee in the May primary for on June 8 It is facing again a crisis it has faced mayor and will oppose Paul Lostut-
before. During the civil war the number of enlist ter, , former Bedford high school ments among the students was so great, it was almost! 'coach and Republican candidate in forced to close its doors. The Spanish-American war the general election in November.
and the last world war presented similar problems. You will remember seeing in the paper not long ago that perhaps the state of Towa had the largest
percentage of men in our forces in the Philippines. 483, will meet at 8 p. m. Monday at! In any case, many of this little college’s graduates 2714: E. Washington st. were there and some have not been heard of for fication of the ritual of 1870 will be ‘many months. Somehow I think history will repeat itself and Patrons association of Marion counTowa Wesleyan college will weather the storm. Solty.
will all our other institutions which are really needed aod dats a constructive piece of work. We citizens : for work
0. E. 8S. TO SEE RITUAL Englewood chapter, O. E. S, No.|
Exempligiven by the Past Matrons and
Mrs. Aileen Money is president of the association. Hazel Pavey is
ToT ort
Eng!
academy at Annapolis. ‘was appointed by Rep. George Gil-
appointment to the U. S. naval Mr. Farner
lie (R.) of the fourth district.
HOLD EVERYTHING
| sions looking toward a unified labor
| All through southern Russia hos-| sions, for the sole purpose of dis-|pitals, sanitariums and schools are
(filleg with wounded and sick. In | Stalingrad, Astrakhan and Baku [they sit in the parks and walk the {streets, often in dressing gowns, [sometimes trying out new crutches. They appear reasonably well pro(vided for and are generally cheer-
|and ears with dust from the Kirghiz | ful. | steppes, I waited for three days for]
Among the passengers embarking lat Astrakhan were a couple of hun|dred raw conscripts off for a Cau-
C. I. 0. REJECTS A. F. L. MERGER
Suggests Conferente Seek Co-operation War Effort.
WASHINGTON, June 6 (U. P.) — The Congress of Industrial Organizations has rejected proposals for “immediate organic labor unity” with the American Federation of Labor, but it letf the door wide open today for joint action and discus-
to
movement after the war. The C. I. O. suggested that a “na- | tional conference to win the war” be convened to plan C. I. O. and A. P. of L. co-operation and collaboration in the war effort, and that the C. I. O. and A. F. of L. executive councils establish :«. united national labor council to formulate a program covering all issues affecting labor. The C. I. O. executive board concluded a three day meeting yesterday with its “peace” resolution, but did not mention A. F. of L.'s executive board’s formal unity proposal made last month, or John L. Lewis’ letter to C. I. O. president Philip Murray and A. F. of L. president Wiliam Green last January suggesting “accouplement” of the two organizations.
Fears “False Issue”
But the resolution was an obvious indirect reference to Mr. Lewis. It said: “The C. I. O. expresses its sincere desire to take any steps toward establishment of unity with the A. F. of L. in the effort to further labor’s contribution toward a speedy victory over the axis. “However, the C. I. O. does not intend to permit anyone to interfere with the nation’s war effort by injecting the false issue of immediate organic labor unity, thereby hoping that efforts to achieve) this end wouid create dispute and friction that would undermine the growing collaboration and co-opera=
{pendent upon Caucasion oil. Her air force, her tank corps, her mercantile and naval fleets and her whole tractorized agricultural Sys- | tem is largely fueled by oil from the Caucasus. The Russians must hold that oil to continue the war effectively. An iridescent film on the surface of the Caspian sea told us our ship was nearing Baku. Then oil der- | ricks came into view, then islands and hills, then the city itself, belching smoke from the chimneys of its oil refineries.
Private Listens
general,
RATIONING FOR U.S. KEY
‘Farm Experts Expect No | ‘Meatless’ Days; Plenty Of Chicken Seen.
WASHINGTON, June 6 (U, P.) == Establishment of the foods requiree ments committee to control produce tion and allocation of all civilian and military food supplies will not mean “meatless, wheatless or other= less days,” department of agricule ture officials said today.
Although admitting that some shortages of individual food items probably will develop, officials dee clared that there would be no over= all shortage of food, and that no further extension of rationing was planned. At present only sugar is rationed to consumers, and coffee, tea and cocoa to roasters and wholesalers.
Harvest Outlook Good Secretary of Agriculture Claude
| R. Wickard, chairman of the nine= man committee, will determine the
civilian, military and foreign food requirements and govern crop plant
ing to meet those requirements. An agriculture departmentg spokesman said food production this year will be high, and that as long as the war lasts no one should g0 hungry. However, other officials pointed to the shortage of farm labor, transportation difficulties and the impossibility of determine ing future military needs of food as factors that may bring scarcities in some items of food. But other items will probably make up for any shortage. For exe ample, one official pointed out thas the great increase in egg production this year will be reflected in an abe normal supply of chickens. If a shortage should develop in some meat line, he said, Americans can eat chickens as a substitute,
Allied Demands Heavy
The committee will play virtually the same role as that held by the World War I food administration headed by Herbert Hoover. Although the United States ene tered the war with surpluses in many food items—in contrast to its position in World War I—demands by the united nations have taken more than 5,000,000,000 pounds of food since April, 1941. Cost of this ood has been more than $650,000,«
OPPOSES PACT WITH CARTELS
Arnold Warns That These Groups Still Seek
Nazi Business.
NEW YORK, June 6 (U P.) -= Thurman Arnold, assistant attorney predicted last night that international cartels would seek a negotiated peace so they can keep on doing business with Germany. He told the National Federation of Sales executives that cartels had not been smashed. Last week, he
To Son's Orders
SACRAMENTO, Cal, June 6 (U. P).—Pvt. Samuel R. Kipnis ' took orders uncomplainingly today from his staff sergeant, who haphappens also to be his son. |
Pvt. Kipnis, 45 former mayor of South Tucson, Ariz. and his 20-year-old son, Julian, both are assigned to the army air force here. The elder Kipnis was ga sergeant in the 73d aero squadron overseas in world war I. He wanted to get “back in the fight.” Pvt. Kipnis was philosophical. “The boy is top man from reveille to retreat,” he observed. | | fee that I can assert myself. pr
CAPTURED 21 YEARS AFTER FLEEING CELL
BALTIMORE, Md. June § | P).—William Kinney, 48, today was scheduled to be returned to the Montgomei'y, Ala. state penitentiary to complete a 15-year sentence for robbery which was interrupted 21 years ago when he escaped after serving five years. Kinney told police he spent the intervening years sailing the seven seas as a merchant sailor and has visited ports throughout the world. He was apprehended by local detectives, aided by agents of the FBI who had discovered his identity as a result of the U. S. maritime commission’s recent order for fingerprinting of all seamen serving on the nation’s merchant fleet. Kinney’s identity—and his escape 21 years ago—were discovered by the FBI's comparison of his fingerprints. He was picked up when his ship docked on a warrant forwarded May 12 by Alabama authorities. He held an engineer's license.
WOMAN KILLED BY CAR
NEW CARLISLE, Ind. June 6 (U. P.).—Mrs. Hattie Fack, 82, was! injured fatally last night when she! walked into the path of an automobile driven by Robert L. Wea-
tion between the A. F. of L. and
the C. 1. O. he
ver, 31, of Elkhart, directly in front
!said, the department of justice dis= |covered 162 cartels organized by the ‘German dye trust with relation te
"American business.
Permeated Industry “They permeated the structure of
{ American industry,” he said. “They |gave private groups the power to
control our foreign economic policy, to divide world markets, to make in ternational commercial deals with our enemies unknown to the state department.” He told the executives that they, “with a united voice must oppose any drives for peace that may come out of the discouragements that are possible and even probable in the next two years, unless that peace is one that gives us the power instantly to suppress international gangsterism, whenever it rears ite head.”
What Yous Buss With WAR BONDS
The modern submarine costs approximately $3,000,000. Torpedo warfare on the sea was highly dee veloped in World War I and America has kept apace and is building the most efficient subs in the world today. The newest submarines displace about 1500 tons.
Scores of these undersea craf$ are under construction in U, 8, navy yards for service wherever they are needed. The voluntary purchase of war bonds by Amerfe cans everywhere will insure ous navy parity with our enemies, the Japs and the Nazis, least 10 per cunts of your Misoma in war bonds every pay day
Invest a
A
a
