Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 16 September 1942 — Page 18
“Begin Friday Night ‘At 9:30 o’Clock.
Another of the series of district]
dimouts in Indianapolis will be held Friday when defense district No. 17, which covers a large por-
tion of the near south side, will be dimmed out for a half hour. Lights in all homes and business establishments - should be turned out at 9:30 p. m. when whistles 1 the Big Four railroad, Eli Lilly & Co. and the Sterling Laundry are sounded. Windows must be covered where lights are left on in emergency cases. ~The district. boundaries are; . East st., Shelby st. between Harrison st. and the Fountain Square, east side of Virginia ave. to Mc- . Carty st., west to Madison ave., east ‘gide of Madison ave. to South st. south side of South st. to Virginia ave., south side of Fletcher ave. to
Noble st. and south side of Harrison :
st. to Shelby st. Dividing line for the boundaries is the middle of the street.
PILGRIM SHRINE TO MEET
~The regular meeting of Pilgrim Shrine will be held at 8 p. m, Oct. 1 in Castle hall. A social megting, scheduled for this week, has
: been postponed.
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The half way mark—half way between sitting and standing—is ihe new “standing seat” soon to be installed in busses and streetcars by the Capital Transit Co. Washington, D. C. Miss V. Preslan, of Washington, D. C., and Kenosha, Wis., shows how it works. An ODT innovation, the use of the new seats will increase passenger capacity in busses from 40 to 50 persons and in streetcars from 40 to 68 persons. The seats are only 18 inches apart instead of the present 28 to 32 inches, but passengers will find comfort by gripping the hand rail attached
their feet firmly on the foot-rail.
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NEW YORK, Sept. 16 (U. P.).—
Loe .Fquld, a comedian, never tried
harder to “lay than he does these days when he broadcasts a daily 15-minute pro= gram to Holland called
Krampf.”
»
'em in the aisles
“Mein
“That means cramp and I'm hop-
ing to be able to cramp Adolf Hitler’s style a little with jokes and information,” Fould explaineg, “Jokes can be as deadly as bullets under the right circumstances and if I can get the Hollanders laughing at the Germans it may hasten the day when they will rise’ against the aggressors.” Fould is a Dutchman, born in
Rotterdam, 29 years ago, and for-
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Comedian's ‘Mein Krampf' Keeps Holland Laughing
merly was a comedian there. He came to the United States two months before the Nazis overran the Low Countries in 1940. He was rejected when he tried to enlist in the United States army. A sample of straight propaganda is the story of the Nazi trooper who wrote home. ~-“Dear Ma,” he said, “I received the shoes. Thanks. They were delicious.” Then there’s the~one about the captured Nazi who told his Russian guard that after ‘the war he intended to tour the country on a bicycle, seeing all the wonders of the Third Reich. °* “That is good,” said the Russian. “And what will you do in the afternoon.” ? On the true side, says Fould, are such stories as the one about: the elderly Hollander who boarded a trolley, carefully scrutinized the salute and shouted, “Heil, Hitler.” There was no response and he repeated the salute again. The others glowered at him. Finally the man sighed, sat down and exclaimed: “Thank God. Now we can talk.”
Story Travels Far
“That's true stuff,” Fould said, “The incident happened and Hollanders hearing of it from the United States will be cheered that the story has traveled across the ocean. It will please them that their refusal to bow to Hitler's domination is understood.” Fould said that even the Germans were tired of Paul Joseph Goebbel’s propaganda. Following an R. A. F. raid, the controlled press must say that the only destruction was to churches or schools, he said, and this has caused the Germans to credit the English with a new type bomb. One fitted with a rubber nose and a magnetic device. When the bomb strikes the earth, it bounces on the rubber nose until the magnetic device attracts it to a school or hospital, when it explodes, the story goes.
Services Free
Fould’s service on “Mein Krampf” are free. His brunet wife Jeane, 25, helps obtain material. In ‘addition to his daily axis - bombardment, Fould supervises the entertainment of Dutch sailors in this country. New arrivals are fed and housed in
| the Netherlands rooms at the Sea-
man’s institute. . Fould gathers and passes out news of friends and relatives. - He receives messages. which he saves for transmission. 1t is a clearing house for good news and bad. ‘Good or bad, over the air it goes —and the Nazis don’t like it.
AUGUST RAIDS KILL 403
NEW YORK, Sept. 16 (U.. P).— Air raids on Great Britain during August took a civilian toll of 403 killed and 509 injured, the British radio reported yesterday.
Lodge, Bridges idges. Nominated; Racket-Buster Leads Ex-Huey Long Aid.
By UNITED PRESS Two Republican senators were renominated and a Democratic senator was defeated in Tuestay’s primary and run-off elections, returns showed today. Two Democratic senators were renominated without opposition. Returns were tabulated in primaries in Massachusetts, New Hampshire, New Jersey, Michigan and Wisconsin and in a Democratic prim&ry run-off election in Mississippi, where the outcome was equivalent to election. MICHIGAN: Detroit's racketbusting Circuit Judge Homer Ferguson led Gerald L. K. Smith, former Indianapolis minister and later an aid of Huey Long, by a comfortable margin for the Republican sentorial nomination. Senator Prentiss: M. Brown, Democratic incumbent, was unopposed. With the possible exception of Dr. Rudolph W. Ternerowicz, Detroit Democrat, incomplete results indicated the state
‘would renominate its incumbent
congressmen, including Rep. Clare E. Hoffman (R.) who had been charged with pre-war isolationism.
MISSISSIPPI: Former Senator James O. Eastland defeated Senator Wall Doxey in a run-off race the Democratic. senatorial nomination for the seat once held by the late Senator Pat Harrison. This was a defeat for the political machine of Senator Theodore Bilbo, who had supported Doxey.
MASSACHUSETTS: Senator Henry Cabot Lodge Jr. won the Republican renomination by a margin of about 7 to 1 over Courtenay Crocker, Boston lawyer. He will oppose Rep. Joseph E. Casey, the Democratic choice, in the November election. Mayor Roger L. Putnam, Springfield, - appeared the winner in a close race with former Lieut. Governor Francis E. Kelly for the Democratic gubernatorial nomination. Governor Leverett Saltonstall was unopposed for Republican renomination for a third term.
NEW HAMPSHIRE: Senator Styles Bridges far outdistanced Arthur J. Gurneler, Hillsboro millhand, for the Republican senatorial nomination. The Democratic senatorial nominee appeared to be former Republican Governor Francis P. Murphy who was leading Alvin A. Lucier, Democratic national committeeman, by a 2 to 1 margin. - Murphy holted the Republican party several months ago. In the only upset Dean Chester E Merrow of Vermont junior college won the Republican congressional nomination in the first district from Rep, Arthur B. Jenks, whom Merrow had criticized for pre-Pea] Harbor isolationism. NEW JERSEY: A close contest developed in the Republican senatorial primary between Gill Robb Wilson, state director of aviation, and Albert Hawkes, former president of the U. S. Chamber of Commerce. Four other candidates were out of the running, The winner will run in the November election against Senator William H. Smathers, who had no opposition for the Democratic renomination. Hawkes led Wilson by about 6000 votes with returns from approximately half the state’s precincts counted. WISCONSIN: Gov. Julius -P. Heil, Milwaukee industrialist, won renomination for a third term in the Republican primary on the basis of returns for more than two-thirds of the state’s precincts. William C. Sullivan, Kaukauna, held a narrow lead over Gustave Keller, Appleton attorney, for the Democratic gubernatorial nomination. Orland S. Loomis, Progressive candidate, was without opposition. —_— C. I. 0. LEADERS TO MEET TERRE HAUTE, Ind. Sept. 16 (U. P.).—Charles Galloway, Vigo county industrial unions council president, said today a three-day state meeting of the Indiana industrial council will open here Friday. More than 1200 C. I. O. delegates were expected to attend the annual convention, Galloway said. Speakers will include Governor Schricker, Powers Hapgood, Indianapolis, C. I. O. regional director; Thomas O'Malley, department of labor wage-hour division regional director, and Louis E. Austin, president of District No. 11, United Mine Workers of America.
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winter, and the certainty that he will have to leave a large army in the Caucasus anyhow, will make early efforts to get troops and airplanes bac Europe to meet attack at some other point and that we should beat him to its We should not wait even until freezing starts to slow up his creaking transporiation system, or until it again adds the factor of chill and misery to labor and production problems, they say. They say, too, that since the final collapse' of Stalingrad’s defense might precipitate the long-expected Japanese invasion of Siberia, we should also beat the Japanese to the punch. The present phase of nervewar, keeping the axi¥ fidgety by forays on the fringes of their defenses as at Tobruk, the fact that every day of the grinding siege of Stalingrad is costing the Nazis thousands of lives—those, they declare, are not enough. ’ The arguments are valid, but the simple fact is that they are only arguments. Whether soon or later, now or next month, this winter or next spring, the second front cannot be established until our military experts say we are ready for it. Both President Roosevelt's and Prime Minister Churchill's statements of a week ago that united nations action designed to relieve Russian’s plight had been settled upon were too binding in form to have been mere generalizations, but
With the supreme German assault on Stalingrad one week old today—the 25th’ day of hard fighting
especially. in Londoa. It is urged that the fact that a second front can
hardly come in time now to save Stalingrad should not deter opening it, but rather that immediate advantage should be taken of the delay Hitler already has suffered in
Advocates of “a second front now” say that Hitler, faced by an early
there—agitation. for a second front has i revised,
forthcoming only when there is a reasonable guarantee of success. An unsuccessful attempt, whatever the urgency of the need to relieve Russia, would lose us more in morale and prestige—and gain the Nazis more—than any tactical advantage invoved in temporary relief. Whether it comes in Norway, In France, from North Africa, from the air or anywhere else, the offensive must be successful and must have a permanent and decisive effect. Hitler has illustrated all over again that the waging of war is a cold-blooded and calculating thing, however much the element of gambling may sometimes be involved. Hitler always wants his odds on the long side, the longer the better, in any campaign. We would be doits and play straight into his plans if we did “not figure our chances just as thoroughly and selfishly in advance. That is the kind of selfishness that often turns out to be wisdom in the end.
EDITS DEPAUW: ALUMNUS
| CREENCASTLE, Sept. 16 (U.P.). —Clyde E. Wildman, president of DePauw university, said ' today Robert E. Crouch, alumni relations director and alumni fund executive secretary, has been appointed editor of the DePauw Alumnus. He
—Dr, Gabriel Terra, 69, resident of Uruguay from 1931 to 1938, died last night after a four-year illness. Terra, brother-in-law of President Alfredo Baldomir, during his first term as president in 1933 ruled as a dictator to force through constitutional reforms which were being blocked by the national council of nine members, who shared the executive
power.
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