The frontier. (O'Neill City, Holt County, Neb.) 1880-1965, November 07, 1940, Image 3

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

    *
Kennedy Says Farewell to Churchill
U. S. Ambassador to England Joseph Kennedy, left, is shown as he
bids good-bye to Premier Winston Churchill at No. 10 Downing street,
London, before he left for the United States by clipper plane. Following
bis return the ambassador conferred nearly four hours with the President.
Mrs. Kennedy accompanied him to the White House.
New Chief of R.A.F. Takes Over
Air Marshal Sir Charles Frederick Algernon Portal, new chief of
Britain’s fighting air force, takes over. Sir Charles succeeded Air Mar
shal Sir Cyril Newall as chief of the British air staff, stepping up from
bis post of chief of the R. A. F. bomber command. He is shown (center)
going over plans with members of his staff at an R. A. F. station.
Shake on Pact
Heinrich Starmer, special German
envoy who arranged the Tokyo end
of the Axis deal, shaking hands
with Japanese Foreign Minister Yo
suke Matsuoka after the deal.
Bomb Inventor
Antonio Pannutte of Warren, Ohio,
inventor of a new bomb that can be
guided to the target by radio from
the plane that drops it. It has wings
and a rudder.
Observe Education Week
“Education for the Common Defense” is the theme of American Edu
cation week to be observed November 10 to 16. Above are shown three
important phases of education: training: for a vocation, learning: to read,
and preparing: for American citizenship. More than 8,000 persons visited
public schools during: this week last year.
China Becomes a Democracy
f FACT5 ABOU
f CHINA
Pop. 457,835,475
AREA 2,90b,475 Sp.Hi.
China will place herself in the ranks of the democracies on Novem*
her 12 when she will promulgate a constitution. Leaders of the Chinese
government are Madam and Generalissimo Chiang Kai-shek, shown
above. (Insert) Chinese troops who are fighting Japan. Area now occupied
by the Japanese army is printed in black in the above map.
Transit of Mercury
STANDARD STANDARDTIME
TIME ZONE OF INGRESS
EA5TERN 3 49 P. M.
CENTRAL 2 49 PM,
MOUNTAIN I 49 P. M.
PACIFIC_ 12 49 P M.
Mercury will pass across the face
of the sun along the path indicated
in the above diagram on November
11 for the first time in 13 years. The
planet’s position at one-hour inter
vals after the time of ingress is
also shown.
National Defense
Daniel C. Moan, former mayor of
Milwaukee, will speak on the rela
tionship of national defense to mu
nicipalities at the national conven
tion of the American Municipal as
sociation to be held in Chicago No
i vember 13 to 15.
Japanese School Children Salute Our Flag
Here Is a morning scene in one of the classrooms of the Moiliill Japanese language school in nonolulu,
where the ceremony of saluting the flag as it is performed in American mainland schools was introduced
recently. The Japanese children bow in the style to which they are accustomed. There are 26 Japanese
language schools in Honolulu.
I
Is ‘Your Number Up,' Mr. Young American?
Right: Judge Howard E. Davis, chairman of the draft advisory board for Philadelphia, with the historic
World war goldfish bowl that left its resting place In Independence hall to play Its role in the nation’s first
peacetime conscription. Left: James, Arthur and Timothy Dunn, three brothers who by an odd coincidence
drew draft numbers 1, 2 and 3, topping list of 3,425 registrants from Queens, New York.
Our First and Second Line of Defense I
Ships of the United States fleet are pictured during recent maneuvers
off the California coast, as naval planes fly in formation overhead. Build
ing a navy second to no nation is rapidly becoming a reality, as America
prepares for defense and protection of the Western hemisphere against
possible invasion by the totalitarian powers.
‘Sunshine’ Made in New Jersey
8. G. Hibbcn, director of applied lighting at the YVcstinghouse lamp
laboratories in Bloomfield, N. J„ shown with the 10,000-watt mercury
vapor lamp that produces a light one-fifth as bright as the surface of
the sun. Although encased in a cooling Jacket of running water, the
radiations from the lamp set fire to the wrapping paper.
Trousseau
Fiftecn-ycar-old Delvlna Walker
of Luray, Va., leans against her 76
year-old husband, John Heflin. Re
cently married, they took up resi
dence on his big farm nearby.
Flee War Zone
Adlam Ahmed, Turkish waiter
aboard the Egyptian refugee ship,
El Nil, grins as he holds Moses
Levitt, of Palestine, when the El
Nil docks at Jersey City.
NATIONAL I
AFFAIRS
Reviewed by
CARTER FIELD
Johnson, Farley and
Glass in unusual cam
paign rolls . . . Prepara
tions for “Hemisphere
defense” under way.
lBell Syndicate—WNU Service.)
WASHINGTON.—One of the curi
ous angles of the recent presiden
tial campaign was the desperate ef
fort of both parties to get certain
men to come out in the open and
speak, and of getting other men to
keep quiet
Of course, in each instance one
party tried to get the man to speak.
Johnson
MIIU U1C UUICI pox j
tried to persuade
him to keep quiet.
The latest devel
opment was the de
cision of Hiram W.
Johnson to make a
radio speech against
the third term. It
may be recalled that
in 1932 the California
senator actually ad
vocated the election
of Roosevelt. John
son s causuc disapproval oi Meroerx
Hoover had a good deal to do with
that.
In 1936 Johnson said nothing, ei
ther for or against. He had soured
quite a bit on Roosevelt after his
first blush of enthusiasm. But he
was not particularly keen about Alf
M. Landon. So he just kept quiet.
DISREGARDS PARTIES
Johnson has been almost as un
impressed by the notion of party
regularity as the late William E.
Borah, probably due to his battles
with the old Republican machine in
the days of W. H. Crocker in Cali
fornia. In 1912, showing his dis
regard of party regularity, he was
the nominee for vice president on
the Progressive ticket with Theo
dore Roosevelt, at which time, by
the way, Franklin Roosevelt voted
for him.
In 1916, Johnson became an abom
ination to all regular Republicans
because so many of them blamed
him for the defeat of Charles E.
Hughes for the presidency. This had
lots of interesting repercussions
There is scarcely a doubt that if
Johnson had made a few speeches
for Hughes in 1916, he would have
been nominated at some later time
for the presidency by the Republi
can party.
In 1920, it was bitter recollection
of what had happened in 1916 that
kept Johnson from having a chance
for the nomination, though he had
made a much better showing than
any other Republican in the presi
dential primaries. It was at that
same convention, by the way, that
he twice refused a chance which
would have made him president by
succession. He declined to run for
vice president with Philander C.
Knox, and then again with Warren
G. Harding. Both men died well
within the four years.
GLASS CAUSED ANXIETY
But Johnson was only one of many
men who have been subject to
much pulling and hauling to get
them on the stump or to keep them
quiet this year. Outstanding in the
group was James A. Farley, the
man who organized the campaign
which nominated Roosevelt in 1932,
and who ran the successful Roose
i velt campaigns of 1932 and 1936.
Farley was violently against the
third term. But he is tremendous
ly regular.
Sen. Carter Glass of Virginia was
another whose silence caused a
great deal of anxiety. Right after
the Chicago convention, where the
great Virginian opposed the third
term in placing Farley in nomina
tion, Senator Glass announced that
j he would vote for Roosevelt. But
| he explained that he felt an obliga
tion to vote t for the nominee be
cause he had been a delegate to the
j cpnvention which nominated him.
• • «
PREPARE FOR DEFENSE
With an eye to an impregnable
hemisphere defense, Washington of
ficials are seeking to establish a
network of New world army, navy
and air force bases strengthened
by diplomatic and military agree
ments.
Such a co-ordinated system of air.
sea and land defenses is being dis
cussed by diplomats representing
I nations on both continents. The
United States is seeking to convince
its neighbors that any agreement
would be entirely voluntary. Use of
the bases would not affect original
sovereignty, and the whole affair
would be co-operative, rather than
j one-sided.
In line with this plan, the United
States invited Latin-American col
laboration in the use of the eight
Atlantic bases offered this country
by Great Britain.
According to present pians, the
United States would provide the
money and, in the beginning, the
land, sea and air equipment.
Diplomats deny that any specific
bases have been mentioned in the
discussions or that negotiations have
reached any definite stage. But then,
diplomats are generally reticent to
discuss the progress of negotiations
until agreements have been con
cluded.