Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 26 July 1945 — Page 8
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ll! servatives to come through the elec-
tion with his support.little damaged was Eden who polled 60 per cent of
ll his electorate. Churchill's - associates and col-| Spears, British ll 16agues toppled around him like tenlll pins ‘while the labor leaders rode
lll through with impressive majorities.
Bracken Out Among those who*went out of parliament in the sweep was Brendan Bracken, Churchill's closest government associate, and information minister until recent weeks when he
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fof Lady Astor;
[ Churchill Swent From Office SAYS In Landslide -Labor Victory,
| became. first lord of the admiralty. f Others who fell were: M. H. MacMillan, secretary of | state fpr air; Brig. Gen. Sir Edward minister in the Levant states; Leslie Hore-Belisha, one-time war minister; Leopold 8. Amery, secretary of state for In-/ dia. Sir James Grigg, war minister; Geoffrey Lloyd, minister of information: Maj. Randolph Churchill, the prime minister's son; Duncan Sandys, reconstruction minister and son-in-law of the prime minister; Richard K. Law, minister of educdtion, Sir William Beveridge, author of the famous Beveridge plan; Ralph Assheton, chairman of the Conservative party; William Astor, son Sir Richard Aeland, leader of the leftist commonwealth party, and Ernest Brown, liberal national and minister -of aircraft production. Defeat Foreseen
That the Churchill bid to stay at Britain's helm during the critical days of the end of the Pacific
‘{iwar and the beginning of recon=
struction was in danger had been foreshadowed before the end of the brief election campaign. But that the Labor party would make a sweep had not even been expected by the most optimistic laborites. All political observers had agreed that it was the most difficult elec= tion to forecast in a generation since nearly a third of the voters were going to. the polls for the first time.
Attlee Cheered Army sentiment, it was known, {had swung sharply to the left and its extent had been revealed in Berlin where the troops cheered Attlee rather than Churchill during an inspection of Field Marshal Sir Bernard Montgomery's “desert rats.”
As the electoral torrent poured in, sweeping his friends and associates out of office, Churchill, grim and doughty as he ever had been in the critical days of the blitz remained closeted in 10 Downing Street.
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Outside the dingy little house which is the office and residence of British prime ministers a little
{erowd stood, huddling close -to-the
building t6 keep out of the drizzling London-rain. Two bobbies were on duty. They told the crowd genially that they had not seen Churchill all day and that there was no chance that he would make a personal appearance. But the crowd did not budge. One of Worst in History
The defeat suffered by Churchill and his caretaker government was ‘one of the worst in British political history.. Eleven of the 15 members iof the cabinet were voted out of {office. ; \ In addition to Churchill and |Eden, Colonies Minister Oliver {Stanley and Production Minister { Oliver Lyttelton survived. | The fate of Col. J. J. Llewellin, rminister of food, and of Sir John Anderson, chancellor of the ex{chequer, still was uncertain. One of the closest contests in{volved Sir Archibald Sinclair, leadjer of the Liberal party. The re{turns in his district showed: E. L. |G. Dower, Conservative, 5564; M. McInnes, Labor, 5558; and Sinclair, 5503. A recount was likely, The electoral results stunned the city—London’s equivalent of Wall Street. Trading on the stock exchange was at a standstill. Brokers had anticipated a nar-
SAYS MARSHAL FAILED FRANCE
Witness Brands Petain as Fallen Idol.
(Continued From Page One)
|'old fashioned blue serge suit and | blue
tie. .A typical small-town French lawyer, politician and parliamentarian, he several times was a member of French cabinets in the 1920's and 1930's, He testified in a low voice, hardly audible even in the small courtroom in the palace of justice. The 89-year-old marshal said at his preliminary hearings that he never sent a telegram congratulating ‘Hitler on the allied defeat at Dieppe, and that to have done so would have been against the interests of France. : Refused to Reply Petain's denial conflicted with a report read into the record yesterday that he did send such a message, and that he offered to send French troops to fight alongside the Germans. The dispatch of such a message was announced in Vichy at the time it purportedly was sent. Yesterday Petain refused to answer questions about the reported message. When today’s session opened, Defense Counsel Fernand
1Isorni asked the court to read Pe-
tain’s testimony in the preliminary hearings on that subject. After. reading the testimony, Mongibeaux asked Isorni why Petain refused to give a straight answer yesterday. Isnori replied that it was Petain’s policy to say nothing. “I am sure I did not give orders to send this telegram,” Petain said in the prelimindry hearings, as quoted by the judge. “The instructions contained in it were not in accordance with my sentiments.” Jeanneney followed former President Albert Lebrun and former Premiers Patl Reynaud and Edouard Daladier, who in the first three days of the trial had damned Petain as a chief contributor to the fall of France.
"THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
No Flash, Attlee. : Solid Britisher (Continued From Page One)
once cropped up at the American embassy where: he and other Labor. party leaders had been invited to dinner. Our ambassador at that time was a great grouse shooter and in order to make conversation asked Attlee if he had done any “shooting.” “Oh, yes,” said Attlee. to do a lot of it.” “What did you shoot?” asked the American ambassador. “Germans,” responded Attlee. Attlee served with distinction in a line regiment throughout the first world war,
“I used
tJ ” ” ATTLEE definitely lacks the ‘sparkling brilliancy of Churchill, But he has a good educational and intellectual background. ' He got his formal education at Haileybury college, a good public school, and at University college, Oxford. His political = education was gained in the east end, where he served as secretary of Toynbee hall and acquired a detestation for poverty, which has stuck with him, . » - » AFTER the war he went into local politics in the east end borough of Stepn® and after serving as mayor and alderman. there became a member of parlia- ° ment for Limehouse in 1922. Attlee is an avid reader without having Churchill's phenomenal capacity for absorbing the world’s literature, He concentrates on social studies and history—with plenty of detective stories thrown in. Nobody will claim that he is either a magnetic personality or an intellectual genius, but everybody who knows him will agree that he is as sincere as anybody who ever entered politics any=where.
Copyright, 1045, by The Indianapolis Times and The Chicago Daily News, Inc,
SKUNK IS A FRIEND
WASHINGTON—The sometimes odoriferous skunk is a valuable night worker for the gardener because he lives largely on garden pests.
7 MICHGAN PRISON HEADS SUSPENDED)
|talned a mild rebuke for Heyns,
»
(Continued From Page One)
existing at the prison, and the|§ propér administration of the in| stitution, require the removal of | b=
these seven officials. ; Heyns Mildly Censufed o At the same time, the report con-
who is now in charge of the institution. ; Dethmers dec that although “the record discloses Wo specific acts Justifying any particular censure of Director Heyns, information concerning improper conditions’ at Jackson prison came to the attention of the director from time to time, and he took up such matters with the warden.” “In his dual position as assistant director in charge of the bureau of prisons,” the reports stated, “he (Heyns) was remiss in that he did not, in all cases, follow up his complaints, directions and prders to the warden.” Investigation of the prison was touched off when Joseph Medley, a “favored” long - term _ prisoner, walked out of the office last November with several hundred dollars on his person and was later caught in Washington, D. C., and! convicted of the murder of Mrs. | Nancy Boyer. He is awaiting exe-| cution.
REINEBERG FUNERAL ~~ RITES ON SATURDAY
Mrs. Lydia Reinéberg, R. R.. 1, Box 685, died last night at St. Francis hospital. She was 72.
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Rites will be held at 10:30 a. m.| Saturday at J. C. Wilson Chapel of | the Chimes, with burial in Gréen-! wood cemetery. A_ lifelong resident of Marion | county, Mrs. Reineberg is survived by a daughter, Mrs. Goldie Cope- | land, R. R. 1; ‘a stepson, Alvin| Reineberg, Terre Haute; four sis-| ters, Mrs. Myrtle McClain and Mrs. | Anna Snider, both of Southport, ! and Mrs. Ollie Flint and Mrs. Mary | Thompson, both of Indianapolis; two brothers, Dan and William! Milburn, both of Indianapolis, and! one granddaughter. .
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| row Churchill victory but were not | prepared for a sweep by the Labor | party whose program is frankly So-|: | cialistic and which demands the na|tionalization of some of Britain's No | key industries. . { The Labor sweep carried not Certifi- ‘only fts strongholds in the Welsh cate ining country and the industrial y cities of the Midlands but also the} Needed! | great residential suburbs of Lon{don and the rural areas which {have been conservative for gen(erations. The conservative vic- | tories, generally, occurred in. dis|tricts where the opposition was | split.
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LUSK, Wyo. (UP.)—The wellknown Yank ingenuity appeared in Lusk recently. The various insignia of the office of civilian defense, worn in Lusk when the organization was active, were made into two quilts by women's groups. The quilts were sold during the Seventh War Loan drive.
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