Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 28 October 1942 — Page 4
Si Jobs. : & |
SHINGTON, Oct. 28 (U. B).~}
g touches to a series of dig Gosigned to reese ite ac-
‘of between 20,000 and 50,000
sential farm workers.
has decided to attempt to bar ‘all other jobs and from ininto the armed services essary” workers on livestock, , and - poultry . Formal ves may be ed later to-
to “alleviate a shortage of ential farm workers which is tening the dairy, livestock, and altry production necessary to full jecution of the war.” If neces“it may be applied later to farm categories. Second Freeze Move The new scheme will mark the id time WMC has applied the principle—through indirect instead of labor “draft” to solve a specific man-
ACUI0I1S
risiation
r shortage. A similar program].
s instituted last summer in the aber and non-ferrous metals in-
“The farms labor freeze will be atempted through co-operation g 13 federal agencies, all nonlturar employers, and the 5. themselves. It will work as
‘ Selective service will be incted to defer from armed servall “necessary” dairy, livestock i poultry workers “for whom recements are not available,” but y so long as they remain in those pations.
Bar Enlistments
"2. The armed forces will be intructed to bar such workers from pluntary enlistments. Se “All other employers, including actors and sub-contractors andling government work, will be structed to refrain from hiring killed workers who have been end in the same three types of m production.” Thus—if the plan works—it will scome impossible for skilled dairy, estock, and poultry farm workers p transfer into any other activities, though they will be able to reve from one farm to another. nemployed workers with skills in se occupations will be unable to d work elsewhere.
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IB vial U. S. Bases Periled: | was not yet won and while claiming
| the Japanese and the American sea 8 | forces had suffered hard blows, par-| | ticularly to thelr aircraft carriers—| : {the key pieces in the chess ‘game ‘| of war in the Pacific.
WILLKIE SPEECH CALLED GOP AID
Electrified” Part Party, Gates Says; Claims Victory
In Congress Races. (Continued from Page One)
South Bend, but a poll conducted by the South Bend Tribune, which has been fairly accurate in the past, shows Grant will be returned by a comfortable margin, Although Sam Cleland, F't. Wayne, is a good Democratic campaigner, Rep. George W. Gillie is said to be safe in the fourth district. Rep. Forest A. Harness’ re-election as a Republican has been handicapped by the addition of the industrial city of Anderson, but he still is given the edge over his Democratic opponent, Edward C. Hayes, in the fifth.
McMurray Hopes to Win
Floyd I. McMurray is a former Democratic superintendent of schools who always ran ahead of the ticket and is hoping to unseat Rep. Noble J. Johnson, Republican, in the sixth. His backers give him a 50-50 chance, but the Republicans say Johnson will win by around 7800, their checkup shows. Rep. Gerald W. Landis, Republican, is expected to defeat Dr. O. A. Noland, Democrat, in the seventh. Republicans think that Charles ¥ LaFollette may unseat Rep. John . Boehne Jr., Democrat, in the
a but it takes a good deal of
G. O. P. faith to believe it. Earl Wilson, Republican, says he i8 suze to defeat his Democratic opponent, Roy duckleberry, -in the gin.’ ee Rep. William 'L. Larrabee, Democrat, likely will lose the new 10th district to the incumbent, Rep. Raymond S. Springer, Republican.
SUICIDE—A DIFFERENT WAY
CINCINNATI, O., Oct. 28 (U.P). —Frank Gentsch, 77,. blind, succeeded in a suicide attempt today—
it. Gentsch fried to hang himself. He tied a bathrobe cord to his neck and to the railing of a third-floor porch at. a home for sightless working men. The cord broke and he
record says it’s worth a trial.
died in the fall.
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the same one believed-attacked the
but not in the way he had planned]
| presenting Bloomington with the
| day committee.
~ Americans Gain. on EL Guadalcanal. (Continued from Page One)
| that the American naval forces had
fl | been “destroyed” admitted that thel | U. 8. navy was still fighting in the
‘Solomons area. : . Costs Both Sides Heavily . :One factor was spparent. Both
In 'a speech ‘last night, Navy Secretary Frank Knox said that the navy is more powerful in “tonnage, air power and fire power” than before Pearl Harbor, but still is not formidable enough to “do properly” the vast job required of it on “all the seas.” A possible indication of Japanese air difficulties and also a possible repercussion of Japan’s heavy air losses was given by an announcement of a reorganization of the air branch of the Japanese navy. No details were revealed by Tokyo beyond a statement that a considerable production ‘increase was expected Japs Hurled Back
In the land fighting on Guadalcanal island, American troops defending the vital Henderson airfield turned back a Japanese breakthrough on the south side of the field and American marines scored/ “small gains’ on the west. Ultimate victory on land, however, seemed almost certain to depend upon which side won sea superiority for Teinforsement of land forces. The most important new development of the battle seemed to be an attack by American fliers on strong Japanese naval forces about 400 miles northeast of Guadalcanal, north of thé New Hebrides and the Fiji islands on which are United States advance bases.
‘Samoa Not Far Away
There was no official explanation why these forces were so far from the major scene of action, but it was pointed out that from the point where they were intefcepted by American airmen, the Japanese could have struck at Espiritu Santo, an American base in the New Hebrides, or at the Fiji islands. A short sailing distance to the east are the Samoan islands, another major American base and key point in the supply line between Hawaii and Australia. The last action against that] enemy force was ‘Monday . night when navy . Consolidated “Catalinas” attacked it. The force was
day before by a naval carrier air force east of the Stewart islands. The night attack of the “Catalinas” resulted in a torpedo hit on an enemy carrier and two bomb hits on an enemy cruiser. Those were administered in the midst of heavy anti-aircraft fire during which’ one American plane was damaged.
Two Destroyers Sunk
The navy revealed further reports on the. earlier air battle with presumably that same force earlier in the day. One. enemy aircraft carrier was badly damaged, another damaged. . One enemy cruiser was badly damaged and one battleship was hit. : : The report by the navy in its communique last night showed that the Americans have sunk two Japanese destroyers. The latest communique raises the total Japanese warship casualties to 72—12 sunk, three probably sunk and 57 damaged—since Aug. 7. In that same period the navy has acknowledged the loss of 15 ships— three ‘heavy cruisers, the aircraft carrier . Wasp, - six destroyers, four transports and a fleet tug. ' Additionally an unnamed carrier wag “severely damaged,” two destroyers were damaged and “lesser” damage was suffered by other unidentified warships.
Sand Fighting Heavy
The Japanese claim is that “26 naval craft, including some of America’s latest and allegedly invineible ships,” have been sunk in
over what period. The reports of activity since Sun-
day are incomplete, but last night's communique seemed to bring up to date the fighting of last Sunday.
1000 ARE REVIEWED IN NAVY GEREMONY
Times Special i ' BLOOMINGTON, Ind., Oct. 28.— Navy day was observed yesterday by a review of the approximately 1000 navy men and women in fraining school at Indiana university,
greatest exhibition in history of the
forces. ‘Led by the university R. O. T. C. band, 400 yeomen and 600 WAVES were reviewed from the steps of the Monroe county court house by officers of the naval school andl members of the Monroe county navy
the Solomons, but it was not clear
sea branch of the country’s armed :
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| autittery’ with. the rgat ~ Dead who made a speech of wel-
come from the dais.
Tuday she wis the guest of Lady: : Astor at a luncheon of the 12 women members of parliament. Earlier | she climbed and descended four
flights of: stairs in three different
honses, inspecting bundles of
clothing - sent to needy ‘Britons from America. Mrs. Winston
2 82 8 LET'S consider yesterday more closely. Eleanor Roosevelt saw the little people .of London who saved their own city—the typists, shop girls, clerks and plumbers of civil defenise. But 'she did not have time
‘to talk with them. The band was
playing and she: was watching the brilliantly efficient full-dress exercises they were putting on. She saw rescue squads reconstruct with dummies smeared with red paint those scenes of blood and death they knew in the blitz, but there was not time to talk with them, except in the stereotyped phrases of greeting and good wishes. ; I talked with those people later —a man - who had earned the George medal for tossing a delayed action bomb from a bridge —a girl clerk who had motorcycled through a wall of flame to show Mrs. Roosevelt how she carried dispatches in the blitz days—a rescue squad leader who. had saved the lives of at least 20 trapped persons. And these people have stories
to tell Eleanor Roosevelt—and
through her to Americans. I know she wants to hear their stories. It is not her fault that she is not given time to hear
them. At her first press confer-
ence she told how she wanted to break loose and go ameng them
Churchill was her guide on this |
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She has seen. so much, heard so: much and met so many people in so short a time that I know impressions must be whirling . through her brain like a photomontage in a Ben Hecht movie. She enjoyed herself, this lively, ‘ energetic, gay woman, when she met United States privates in the Washington club because they were unabashed and could talk her language, and did. But there is the same spon-
British people, if they were given a chance to meet her beyond the shroud of officialdom. She is good enough, we are good enough and we have nothing to hide. No official permits and no entourages of brass hats are needed to talk to the British people. Mrs. Winston Churchill started out on a sight-seeing tour with Mrs. Roosevelt today but helfway through the morning, she was exhausted and had to drop out. “Mrs. Roosevelt is too good for me,” the prime minister's wife said, sitting on a stairway to rest.
“She is a wonderful woman.”
i , §
taneity, the same welcome in the
He Is ‘Amazed’ at City’s Tribute.
last night during the colorful torchlight parade in tribute to Navy day. ‘I'm amazed at the wonderful turnout and the excellent spirit shown in tribute to the navy,” was the comment of Rear Admiral Randall Jacobs, chief of navy personnel and Navy day speaker. Admiral
~ Thirty-three bands set the tempo for 25,000 marchers, thousands of whom carried blazing torches. The parade lasted .an hour and a half. It was without vehicles, except for the huge army truck which carried paratroopers. : Civilian cars were left out of the lineup in keeping with
the national program of conservation.
Civilian Groups in Line
Some 75,000 cheering civilians of all ages who lined the route saw a typical “united front” spectacle. Marching with the men of the armed forces were home folk, some] 2 of them war workers and some as-
home front with the Marion county Civilian Defense corps. There were Boy Scouts, the Indiana state guard and civic and fraternal organizations. Veterans of other wars who had “done a job” in another attack against this nation’s democracy stepped along with soldiers and sailors of world war II. These included the American Legion, the : Veterans of Foreign Wars, United Spanish War veterans. And home labor groups, the A. F.
‘Indianapolis * “amazed” onsof the}! | nation’s high ranking naval officers|,
Jacobs left last night for Philadel-| } contingent of WAACS due here in| December
And the soldiers are designing
signed to the task of guarding the
Rear | Admiral Jacobs says : ors’ 1
WaAC LINE ADDED
CAMP EDWARDS, Mass. . P) ~The delicate feminine touch has hip Camp Edwards. *
and building a conveyor belt in their new sandwich shop from which will roll nearly 5000 sandwiches a day.
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A iid sriniosd of oil odin Bast owe tls Preoanis Raioadsf
“Pinch hitting” for Tankers Ze Git i Gar nd US
What the Railroads aze dniny to keep motor cars and oil-burners. going
Before submarines struck, railroads hauled Jess than 1 per cent of the 1,500,000 barrels of oil and gasoline used daily by home owners i
motorists of the East.
It was a tankers job pure and simple. Petrolenm came by water. But the war stopped that. So a call for help went out to the railroads.
Although carrying a tremendous war load, che : tailroads rallied promptly to the call. Soon solid
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PENNSYLVANIA ‘RAILROAD
One of America’s Roilroads . « ALL Mabtlised for Woz!
trainloads of tank cars began to boll tia the Bast.
In Fanuiiy 100,000 barrels 2 day went — “...now it’s over 800,000 a day...and soaring higher and higher. On the Pennsylvania Railroad alone, movement of petroleum products now represents one-sixth of its total freight car niles
For the railroads, this is strictly a “pinch Hitting® job. With Victory, Eastern oil will come, by sea ' again. But meanwhile the railroads, to the limit of tank cars available, are keeping oil flowing, swiftly, economically.
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