Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 14 September 1944 — Page 12
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Rep. Landis Says Pearl Harbor -Was Attacked With U. S. Metal.
Times Special
WASHINGTON, Sept. 14. —Following up the attack on the administration made by his Hoosier Republican colleague, Rep. Forest A. Harness, because of the Pearl Harbor disaster, Rep. Gerald W. Landis (R. Ind.) has blamed President Roosevelt for not sooner halting our pre= war scrap iron shipments to Japan. “Japan made the attack upon Pearl Harbor with ships, planes, bombs and bullets made out of our {scrap iron and steel,” Mr. Landis charged on the house floor. “This administration must assume
ment policy with Japan. The sale of scrap to the Nipponese must be listed as another New Deal blunder. “In the first eight years of the New Deal, 1933 through 1940, over 10 million tons of scrap iron went to Japan. Thus, through the administration’s appeasement program Japan built strongly her reserve supplies of scrap steel and iron with which to carry on.a long war.”
What Scrap Meant
What U. S. shipments of scrap meant to the Japs in terms of preparedness for war was outlined by Mr. Landis as follows: “Japan would have been out of the war long ago if the New Deal had prevented the shipments of scrap iron--and. oil products. The 10 million tons of scrap sent to Japan would have built 20 battleships of 45,000 tons each; 50 plane carriers of 30,000 tons each; 100 cruisers of 15,000 tons each; 500 submarines of 2400 tons each, and still leave nearly 5,000,000 tons for planes, tanks, bombs, torpedoes and bullets. “The export of scrap increased the market price of metal in America. This lessened our ‘demand for metal products, and in 1938 it was estimated that the halting of scrap
: | exports would put 75,000 American
men to work for a year: The ex-
portation of scrap was no doubt a contributory factor in the high cost
of American defense. “During the Roosevelt depression we were buying toys, novelties and crockery from the Japanese while our plants remained idle. Our plants could not compete with 25 cents per day Jap labor.”
Says G. 0. P. Sought Embargo
That the G. O. P. sought vainly to remedy the situation was the conclusion reached by Mr. Landis. “For years the Republicans fought to place an embargo on scrap iron to Japan,” he said. “On Jan. 3, 1939, a Republican, Rep. Fred Crawford of Michigan, introduced a bill in congress to stop the sale of scrap iron, pig iron and steel scrap to that country. Not until 1941 did the administration
license the sale of scrap. However, this was too late to prevent the
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O-1% Cope. 1944 by United Feature Syndicate, Ine.
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that attacked Pearl Harbor. “No wonder the New Dealers don't want to talk about the catastrophe at Pearl Harbor. : : ‘“What happened to the quinine|election.”
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Ladies’ Sweater: Blouses 51 UY —Formerly $3.95, for $2.99. sy - .
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