Viewing page 50 of 104

This transcription has been completed. Contact us with corrections.

3 Domestic news   BUFFALO EVENING NEWS--Friday, July 25, 1941

Text of President's Home-Defense Talk

U. S. AID TO CHINA IS GOOD STRATEGY, WILLKIE DECLARES

Would Divert Japan From Attack on Russia, He Tells Frisco Crowd

SAN FRANCISCO, July 25 [[(AP?)]].-Wendell L. Willkie called upon America today to redouble war aid to China as well as to Britain as a means of preventing a Japanese attack on Russia through Siberia.

"In China's ability successfully to engage the energies of Japan lies our best hope of diverting the forces of Hitler's most-effective ally," the 1940 Republican presidential nominee told an overflow audience at an Americans United mass meeting in 8000-seat Civic Auditorium Thursday night.

Increased aid to China now, Mr. Willkie said, not only will prevent Japan from attacking Russia through the back door, but "freed from Japan's menace in the pacific, we shall be able to concentrate more of our strength in the  Battle of the Atlantic."

"The Nazi flood, having reached its full, will begin to recede," he declared.

"As it recedes, the conquered countries, first restless, then revolting, and the German people themselves, their faith in their leader broken under the battering of British air superiority, will somehow, some way, rid themselves of Hitler's tyranny. For history proves that such forces survive only in expansion."

In another vigorous speed for national unity, Mr. Willkie appealed to the audience to support a positive, dynamic defense of America as the only means of maintaining freedom against Adolf Hitler's threat of world domination.

A positive defense, he said, means bold and courageous action. As the "champions of the free way of life," he argued Americans should defend that title with spirit and determination. "We must not be afraid to act," he asserted, "and we must be prepared to act swiftly and suddenly."

"Hitler has challenged our freedom," said Mr. Willkie. 



WASHINGTON, July 25 [[(AP?)]].- President Roosevelt Thursay in the White House addressed men and women engaged in voluntary civilian defense activities. 

Mayor Florello H. LaGuardia of New York, director of civilian defense, said the meeting was "very profitable," that interest was "very keen" and the "enthusiasm most encouraging." The 45 present, five from each Army Corps area, were members of a committee to stimulate volunteer participation in civilian defense.

The text of the President's talk follows:

You have a lot of work to do. I haven't prepared any speech, but I do feel very strongly that we must bring home certain things to every part of the country, and that it has got to be done through civilian work. It has got to be done by civilians among civilians. Other things are pretty well organized - production - and the training program, but what we need is to get the people as a whole to realize certain facts.

The mayor's(Florello H. LaGuardia of New York) work is really in two parts.  The first is what I call quasi-military-a thing like preparing sandbags; and they may be necessary in certain parts of the country, not necessarily all over. Air raid alarms, and so forth and so on. That is only part of it that can be done largely through the constituted authorities in the state governments, city and county governments, but beyond that it is your work, which is at least equally important-more important.

People in this country unfortunately haven't got enough idea of what modern war means. And it isn't anybody's fault over here that modern war means something entirely differnet from what it used to be. It is a war between populations, and not along between armies. That, I think, is something that those in the average home in this country have not yet got through their heads. 

We know what is happening in England today. We know the fact that women in London - mothers of families - are just as important in the defense of Britain as men on a destroyer. They are all part of this defense. And I think that we have a long, long ways to go in this country.

Starret 1-Inch
Micrometers
Brown & Sharpe
Indicators-and other 
Small Machine Tools

remember
BEFORE YOU GO ON VACATION:

DON'T let your Buffalo Evening News National Casualty. Co. Insurance expire. If you have a $1.25 yearly Policy be sure it covers you during the vacation period. Vacation time is accident time. 
And be sure the Buffalo Evening News follows you wherever you go.

Phone WA.4000



Wants Real Results

We are going to get, through you , an organization in every community. We can't do it all from Washington. The responsibility, I think, is yours by units-by corps areas, I am going to hold you responsible in these corps areas for what goes on, and I am not going to be put off by people who say, "Well, we couldn't find out about this from Washington." Or, "We don't know who has the ultimate jurisdiction. You have. In other words, if you have some problem of organization and you can't find out whether it is being handled by this, or that of the other agency within a state, or a corps area, or a community, I am not going to take that as an excuse. Go ahead and do the thing that you want to do, first, and talk about jurisdiction afterwards.

I am looking for real results. You may have some question about your relationship to state councils of defense, and local councils of defense. I am looking for results. I think they will work with you in almost every part of the country. I don't think you are going to have any real trouble, any more than you are going to have sporadic cases of what might be called political trouble.

I don't know, but I have an idea that there are just about as many Republicans in this group as there are Democrats. Frankly-I don't care, except for the fact that his has been a good illustration that this work is non-political. You have labor here. You have capital. you have Negroes here. You have white people. You have got every cross-section of American life represented on this committee.

About this question of politics. Somebody may start it. don't bring it to me. You are Americans. You don't belong to any party in this work.

Oil and Japan

"I don't know that there is anything else I want to say, except that, quite frankly, I am looking for results from all of you. We will do the best we can. It is going to take a little while to get all the machinery working smoothly. I am inclined to think that you don't want to make mountains out of molehills.

What we want is to get this thing into every family in the United States. And, incidentally, there are a great many people who don't even belong to families, who are off by themselves-individuals. We want you to go after those people and explain the real necessity and seriousness of this world situation.

There are lots of things that people don't quite understand. You are an information bureau to all of them. And I will you the example.

Here on the East Coast, you have been reading that the secretary of the interior, as oil administrator, is faced with the problem of not enough gasoline to go around in the East Coast, and how he is asking everybody to curtail their consumption of gasoline. All right. Now, I am-I might be called an American citizen, living in Hyde Park, N. Y. And I say, "That's a funny thing. Why am I asked to curtail my consumption of gasoline when I read in the papers that thousands of tons of gasoline are going out from Los Angeles-West Coast-to Japan; and we are helping Japan in what looks like an act of aggression?"

All right. Now the answer is a very simple one. There is a world war going on, and has been for some time-nearly two years. One of our efforts, from the very beginning, was to prevent the spread of that world war in certain areas where it hadn't started. 

One of those areas is a place called the Pacific Ocean-one of the largest areas of the earth. There happened to be a place in the South Pacific where we had to get a lot of things-rubber-tin-and so forth and so on-down in the Dutch Indies, the Strait Settlements, and Indo-China. And we had to help get the Australian surplus of meat and wheat, and corn, for England.

It Worked for 2 Years

It was very essential from our own selfish point of view of defense to prevent a war from starting in the South Pacific. So our foreign policy was-trying to stop a war from breaking out down there. At the same time, from the point of view of even France at that time-of course France still had her head above water0we wanted to keep that line of supplies from Australia and New Zealand going to the Near East-all their troops, all their supplies that they have maintained in Syria, North Africa and Palestine. So it was essential for Great Britain that we try to keep the peace down there in the South Pacific.

All right. And now here is a nation called Japan. Whether they had at that time aggressive purposes to enlarge their empire southward, they didn't have any oil of their own up in the north. Now, if we cut the oil off, they probably would have gone down to the Dutch East indies a year ago, and you would have had war.

Therefore there was - you might call - a method in letting this oil go to Japan, with the hope - and ft has worked for two years - of keeping war out of the South Pacific for our own good, for the good of the defense of Great Britain, and the freedom of the seas. 

You people can help to enlighten the average citizen who wouldn't hear of that, or doesn't read the papers carefully, or listen tot he radio carefully-to understand what some of these apparent anomalies mean. So, on the information end, I think you have got just as great a task as you have in the actual organization work.

Now on this organization-to come back to that for a minute-it is amazing the number of letters I get here in the white House - and my wife in the White House - from men and women in literally every county in the United States- who are pleading to be told what they can do to help. They honestly are ready to work. 

So my message to you is: Act as startlers of this "horse race."


Cast iron has acquired important new characteristics, since metallurgists have alloyed it with nickel, chromium and certain other metals.