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A—4 xx Conference Resumes To End Warship Construction Strike Deadlock on Union Demands Is Unbroken After All-Day Parley By the Asgociated Press, KEARNEY, N. J,, June 1.—Efforts ‘were resumed today to settle a strike of 8,000 workers at the Federal Ship- building & Drydock Co. after all- day negotiations failed to break a deadlock that has halted construc- tion of six United States warships. Employers and representatives of the industrial union of marine and Bhipbuilding Workers of America (C. I, O.) were called back to an- other conference this morning by a Federal Labor Department concili- ator to seek an end to the tieup which the union said was “100 per eent complete.” L. H. Korndorff, company presi- dent, declared in a statement yes- terday that work was “suspended” at the huge yard but that further meetings would be held in an “earnest attempt * * * to speed ahead the vital national defense work on which the yard is engaged.” Union “Cognizant of Situation.” John J. Green, national president of the union, in a statement said he expressed to Mr. Korndorff at yes- terday's conference the “union’s de- sire to reach as quickly as possible a fair and just settlement, as we are Just as cognizant of the national situation and are just as vitally con- cerned with the welfare of the country as the company is.” The strike’s delay of work on two cruisers and four destroyers as well as three cargo vessels and two tankers had repercussions in Wash- ington, where Secretary of the Navy Edison, a New Jersey resident, said “we cannot afford to have trouble of this sort in these times.” He pre- dicted a speedy settlement. The strike prompted Represent- | ative Hoffman, Republican, of Michigan, to offer a bill in Congress which would require workers on de- fense essentials to sign inviolable “no strike” contracts for the dura- tion of their employment. Penal- ties of up to six months imprison- ment or a maximum $1.000 fine for violations were specified. “If the C. I. O. is permitted to hold up production of warships,” Hoffman said, the country would never be able to prepare. Contract Expired Wednesday. The previous union contract ex- pired Wednesday and the strike be- gan yesterday morning at 12:01 o'clock, Mr. Green said the company at yesterday’'s conference “flatly re- fused to consider the three salient points in dispute, to wit, a union shop, increase in wages and vaca- tion after one year's service.” Mr. Korndorff said both sides had negotiated and accepted a new con- tract, and he was “astonished” to learn that “for some unexpected reason this agreement, contrary to KEARNY, N. J.—“HUNDRED PER CENT STRIKE” TIES UP SIX WARSHIPS—A strike in the yards of the Federal Shipbuilding construction. The strike leaders said 8,000 men, part of whom are shown at the plant gates, were out. Strikers ask a union & Drydock Co., labeled by its leaders “100 per cent complete,” last night had tied up work on six United States warships under provoked strong anti-Allied senti- ment. France, meanwhile, was the object of a new series of posters displayed throughout the country which pro- claimed that the island of Corsica, Napoleon'’s birthplace, was by rights | Ttalian. | Greece, her independence guar- | anteed by the Allies, was warned by | Fascists that partisanship toward Britain and France or an Allied | move toward Salonika, Greek port, which was a World War Allied naval | base, would bring Italian troops | marching through the Balkans. In the midst of this anti-Allied barrage, Americans hastened their | preparations to sail from Genoa |aboard the United States liners | Manhattan and President Harrison. The Manhattan originally was | scheduled to leave today, but offi- cials of the line saia the task of accommodating 2,000 passengers on |a ship which ordinarily carries 800 would hold her in port until to- morrow. One dining room was con- verted into a dormitory for students from North American Theological College in Rome. | Two more Italian emergency meas- ures went into effect today. Civilian automobile traffic was suspended to conserve gasoline, while laundry soap was put on a rations card sys- tem that already applied to coffee and sugar. | British Say Italy Studies | New Contraband Proposals LONDON, June 1 (#)—Alterna- By SIR PHILIP GIBBS, British War Correspondent. PARIS, June 1 (By Wireless).— All the world awaits with suspense the fate of the British and French troops fighting with their backs to the sea around Dunkerque. Some of them, as announced officially, have been disembarked and have reached England with the help of | the royal navy and air force. I had an account of the heroic fighting of the B. E. F. from a gen- eral who belonged to general head- quarters. In the last crisis, due to the be- | trayal of the Belgian King, he took command of a force in the field. It is a terrible story, relieved only by the superhuman valor of men who knew that they were making a last stand against overwhelming odds. After fighting back from Brussels | and Louvain, they were surrounded | on three sides. The enemy had cut them off from the south by driving through the gap to Boulogne. They were striking at them from the east across the old battlefields of the Ypres salient. The enemy planes gave them no respite by day or by night. shop, wage increases and vacations for men of one year's seniority. Spirit of Escaping Troops Undimmed by Blitz Hell-Fire Gibbs Learns of Heroic Action of B. E. F. As Officers and Men Trickle Home The old regular divisions were magnificent. Their non-commis- sioned officers were very steady. The younger men, recruited since the war—clerks and shop assistants and boys from English farms and Scot- tish villages—behaved like veterans after the first shock of war in all its horror. This stubborn retreat of the B. E. F. will live in history as an epic of human valor whatever losses in men and material may be the final ac- count in the enemy’s reckoning. They are bound to be very heavy. The Germans may capture many guns and great stores, but they will not have captured or annihilated the spirit of those comrades in arms who, by treason and treachery, were forced into this retreat. On their way and behind them | now lie many ruined eities. Ypres is in ruins again. Arras is in ruins. The military graveyards of the last war have been ravaged. The war memorials are down. Hundreds of villages, rebuilt after the wreckage of 25 years ago, have been bombed into new ruin or set on fire by in- cendiary shells. Meanwhile, south of the Somme the situation remains without —A. P. Wirephoto. Precision Flyers Feature Carnival At Birmingham Vincent Burnett Is Among Pilots Taking Part in Great Air Show | By the Associated Press. 14 BIRMINGHAM, June 1.—One of the Nation’s great air shows, in the | tradition established by the “flying | circuses” of the post-war era,| opened a two-day stand at Birming- | ham’s Municipal Airport today, carrying overtones of America’s air rearmament program. Pilots stunted in fast planes at the air carnival, just as they have for nine years, but to the tens of thousands who fringed the field the acts took on a new significance. Their acrobatics essentially are the same as those being taught to the hundreds of young men who, | each month, are entering the basic | training school of the Army Air | | a stepped-up program to provide | | this country with more military | | flying personnel. Here in Birmingham, where news of the carnival competed for front- | page space in the newspapers with | news of the European war—liberally | Corps at Randolph Field, Tex., under | tive suggestions to Italy to replnce' proposals for easing contraband R. A. F. Heroic. The young pilots of the R. A, F. did marvelously and were reckless sprinkled with accounts of warplane change, and that in itself is a proof | operations—some of the country’s that the first German push has been | the advices of the officers of the control which have been turned union, was turned down by mem- bership of Local 16” on Thursday. Italy (Continued From First Page) headed by Gen. Canovas, bound for Berlin. Dispatches from Madrid told of | growing insistence there that the British relinquish their hold on Gibraltar—a demand which has | been made repeatedly by the Italian press. | Diplomatic observers linked the Spanish mission with these demands and speculated on what role Gen- | eralissimo Francisco Franca might play in the Italian fight to dislodge | the British from Gibraltar. Might Come Over Week End. Amid the persisting tension some observers expressed belief that an announcement of Italian entrance into the war might come over the week end. Others thought it might be delayed until Premier Mussolini and Fuehrer Hitler had served an ultimatum on France and Great Britain demanding territories. Nothing was known as to the sub- Jects discussed when the Italian Ambassador to Germany, Dino Alfieri, conferred yesterday with Hitler at the Fuehrer’s headquar- ters. Nor could it be ascertained what, if any, messages were being exchanged by Mussolini and Presi- dent Roosevelt. The report that I1 Duce had re- fused—or had been too preoccu- pied—to accept a message from President Roosevelt through the | United States Embassy brought a denial from Ambassador William Phillips that he had asked to see the Premier in recent days. “If I had anything to communi- eate,” he said, “the normal channel would be through the Foreign Min- ister.” Meanwhile, Pope Pius XII re- ceived Spain’s Ambassador to the Holy See in private audience. Little Doubt of Action. Comments in the Italian press left little doubt that Italy intends to enter the war as an ally of Ger- many, but the question of where and when she intends to strike was | veiled by a grim official silence. The most significant new develop- ment was the publication of an edi- torial in Internationali Relazioni, leading foreign affairs commentary, declaring that Italy’s territorial de- mands upon France and Britain *will be enforced by arms.” ‘The editorial said: *France and Britain have rejected the demands of the Italian people; these demands will be enforced by arms. The hour longed for for more than 50 years has come. The Italian people will fight the French and British enemy with extreme deter- mination to complete victory. * * * “The Italian people will enter the eonflict by order of Mussolini.” This declaration of Italian policy appeared as Fascist leaders ex- pressed resentment over the reported arrest and internment of Enrico Mizzi, Italian political leader, by British authorities in Malta. Mizzi heads the Italian section of the Nationalist party in the Maltese cabinet. Newspapers previously have played up stories of the maltreat- ment of Italian citizens in Malta. Spanish Fascist Article. Coincident with the clamor over Mizzi's arrest, papers and radio broadcasters played up an article in Arriba, Spanish Fascist party organ, attacking English possession of Gibraltar, which commands the western end of the Mediterranean and is headquarters of the contra- band control which already has A | down by the Italian government are { “under consideration,” informed Foreign Office sources declared to- day. Diplomatic sources outside the British government, however, as- | serted that “the Allies have finished making advances to Italy. The next step is up to Mussolini.” Italy, it is understood, has not specified why the proposals for a British-Italian agreement were re- | jected. “They had been agreed upon by both parties,” said informed Foreign Office sources. Italians in Switzerland Are Ordered Home LAUSANNE, Switzerland, June 1 (A)—The newspaper Gazette de Lausanne reported last night many Italians who had lived in Switzer- land for years have received tele- graphic orders from the Italian government to come home. The Italian Legation in Bern said it had no knowledge of a gen- eral recall although “some” Italians might be summoned for military training periods. | | Japan Reported Training Parachufists for China By the Associated Press. HONG KONG, June 1.—Chinese military dispatches asserted today | that the Japanese Army in China | had started training young soldiers | as parachutists—perhaps for use in China. While the reports lacked confirma- tion, foreign observers pointed out that the Japanese had been giving special attention to German meth- ods in the European war. They said it was quite possible the Japanese were considering new tac- tics for the war in China, which, de- spite battles here and there, virtually has been stalemated since last No- vember, when the invaders captured Nanning, capital of Kwangsi Prov- ince. Chinese circles professed to be unconcerned, declaring that condi- tions in China were totally different from those in Europe. They said Japan has insufficient planes to stage successful parachute attacks and that long distances would make it difficult or impossible for ground forces to join parachutists, who would be exposed to annihilation if they operated too far from bases. Buchman Not Opposed To 50,000-Plane Plan By the Associated Press. SAN FRANCISCO, June 1-—Dr. Frank Buchman, founder of the Moral Re-Armament Movement, said in an interview yesterday he was not opposed to building 50,000 airplanes for American defense and asserted he was no “peace at any price” man. He said the accusation that M. R. A. leaders in England had fostered the Chamberlain policy of appease- ment was in error. The M. R. A. leader explained, however, that while outbreak of force may call for forceful means of combatting it, he still believed Divine guidance provided “a su- perior force” which could solve problems at their roots. London's taxis, if placed in single file, would stretch for 14 miles, . in their-attack against the German bombers, whom they destroyed in odds of 1 to 10, but the superior numbers of the German planes could not be broken and their bombing was constant and horrible. Nevertheless, the B. E. F. fell back to shorten their line in good order and, despite heavy -casualties, in | such good shape and spirit that |more than once they counter- attacked and drove the enemy back. When one knows that many of these young men had never faced | fire before and that until a few | "momhs ago they were ordinary civilians doing their jobs in peace- time ways, it is a proof of fine | courage and noble discipline that | they withstood the tragic ordeal | with such steadiness and unflinch- ing spirit. Germany’s best troops were sent against them. By the capitulation of the Bel- gians, the British were isolated and outflanked. German artillery had them as targets. German tanks tried to smash them up. They were under slashing machine gun fire and storms of steel. Many officers and men fell on those old fields on which their fathers fought and died in the last war. It was difficult and dreadful to get away the wounded, who were not safe even in the hospital ships, which were deliberately bombed by the enemy planes. Defense (Continued From First Page.) SeteniidoU e il S A partment officials. The closest ap- proach to a breakdown spoke of $700,000,000 for the Army and $600,- 000,000 for the Navy. Other Developments. Mr. Roosevelt'’s message shared attention with a series of other de- fense developments, which included: 1. A Navy decision to cancel the practice summer cruise of 1,100 mid- shipmen to Brazil so that the three battleships of the training squadron could be kept nearer home ports. 2. An Army announcement that a sixth “streamlined” division would be formed in anticipation of the im- mediate increase of 15000 men in Regular Army strength. 3. Conuference Committee agree- ment upon the $1,474,006228 Navy Department appropriation bill, opening the way to early passage, probably next week. 4. President Roosevelt's letter to Speaker Bankhead asking authority to use “dollar-a-year men” as in ‘World War days in order to get ex-~ pert voluntary services. 5. The conierence of Edsel Ford, president of the Ford Motor Co., with Dr. George Jackson Mead, the Treasury’s airplane engine expert, which aroused speculation that the Ford firm would go into airplane production. Berle Calls for Unity. 6. The speech of Assistant Secre- tary of State Adolf Berle, urging labor to co-operate in making the defense machine run smoothly. Mr. Berle spoke in New Jersey, where a ipyard strike has halted work on warships. T. The offer of two shipyards to trim six months off the usual two- year time for building destroyers. The defense tax and the financing programs meanwhile occupied the attention of the House Ways and Means Committee. Secretary Mor- genthau, presenting the adminis- tratic views, testified that both new es and an increase in the national debt limit were “essential.” The program being considered calls for an increase of $3,000,000,000 in the debt limit and defense taxes yielding about $656,000,000 annually. { Although Secretary Morgenthau checked and weakened. The French Army is wonderfully confident that all is well and that Gen. Maxime ‘Weygand is master of the game. German Boys Untrained. Tank officers, who have been in many actions, doing deadly work among the enemy, say that the quality of the German troops is very mixed and unequal. The best troops are formidable, but after fighting with them they come up against un- trained boys, who have no idea of war and whom they almost pity, so that they dislike killing them. The French heavy tanks are in- vulnerable against German infantry and, with their fast-firing guns, in- flict terriffic casualties upon bat- talions. From all the stories which come back it is certain that German losses are enormous. They have only one superior weapon and that is in the air. It is by their air power that they have gone so fast and so far. It is by aerial bombing far be- hind the lines that they destroy the beauty of France and make war upon women and children. They have no respect or pity even for the wounded. From a young American ambu- lance driver I heard a horrible tale of the way in which his ambulance convoy had been deliberately bombed with its loads of mutilated men. (Relessed by the North American Newspaper Alliance, Inc.) said that as far as he knew the ad- ministration had no further tax plans, some lawmakers thought that the prospect of an additional bil- lion for preparedness might neces- sitate some change in the tentative program. The tax proposals were drafted to yield approximateiy $3,000,000,000 in five years—or about the amount previously requested for military purposes. “No Strike” Contracts Proposed. The shipyard strike affecting the construction of naval craft at Kearny, N. J,, inspired a legislative proposal to require workers on de- fense essentials to sign inviolable “no strike” contracts for the dura- tion of their employment. The bill, offered by Representative Hoffman, Republican, of Michigan, specified penalties of up to six months’ im- prisonment or a maximum $1,000 fine for contract violations. Meanwhile, officials saw indica- tions that Mr. Roosevelt intended to work, personally, with his Na- tional Defense Commission. The commission, it was said, would have no power of its own save that of offering suggestions, but would have the full backing of the executive de- partment, if necessary, in getting those suggestions obeyed. Edward R. Stettinius, jr., was the only board member at his desk yes- terday, but he started early and worked long at conferences with munitions officials, measuring the size and scope of his job of assuring a supply of raw materials for arma- ment production. John M. Carmody, the Federal Works commissioner, directed that all P. W. A. personnel and projects records be made available immedi- ately to national defense co-ordi- nators. The rolls, officials said, enumerated thousands of skilled workers and hundreds of projects which could be fitted into the de- fense program. They emphasized that any service by such workers would be on a purely voluntary basis. Ducks Hatched High in Tree A duck on the Chapman farm at Eumundi, Australia, hatched out 12 ducklings in the hollow of a tree 70 feet from the ground and in some mysterious way got her brood safely to the ground. [} best precision flyers demonstrated that occupancy of a cockpit is not for the timid. ‘The program had both an in- ternational and a martial flavor in the appearance of Capt. Alexander Papana, one of the world’s really great pilots. He has expected | momentarily for weeks to be called | back to Rumania, where he is an | air force officer, for active service. London (Continued From First nge.) | German lines and reached England. One small boatload of soldiers picked up two German airmen shot down during a bombing attack and | brought them along. The prisoners were given sandwiches and coffee with their captors before being taken away to prison. ‘The epic of this “second Corunna” (referring to Moore’s retreat from the Spanish Peninsula in 1809) con- tinued with high hopes that it would be consummated by the rescue of most of those who risked their lives that their comrades might escape. “Every gun and every possible plane that can be spared,” the press association said, “will be ham- mering the Germans to bring about this final and complete triumph.” British quarters emphasized that the operations in Flanders have been a “joint Allied action,” British and French armies and navies working in “close unity with a steadiness never excelled.” Attack Danger Held Real. Minister of Health Malcolm Mac- Donald announced the government regarded the danger of a direct German attack on England soon as so real that plans for the dispersal of school children should be ready by the beginning of next week. “Parents who do not register their children by Monday evening run the risk of not having their children taken away,” Mr. MacDonald said. He explained that “the situation regarding evacuation of our large cities and industrial towns is re- viewed by the government each morning.” As Britain became more con- cerned about the safety of children in the event of a German attack, it was announced that 97 special trains will remove 47,000 children tomorrow from east and southeast coast towns to new reception areas. Mr. MacDonald said the govern- ment could not give “any guarantee that anybody in any part of the country will be absolutely safe, but there is clearly much greater safety in a scattered population than in one densely packed.” Mr. MacDonald said that only 87,- 000 of London’s 500,000 children had been registered thus far with the government, Peace Speculation. The declaration of Allied soli- darity came after a day in which Britain had engaged in considerable speculation over whether Adolf Hit- ler would seek to split Britain and France with separate peace offers as a result of the Flanders disaster. It came, too, at a moment when London felt sure Italian entry into war on the side of Germany involved only a question of time. Some ob- servers believed Italy might come in within a few days and others felt Premier Mussolini would wait for several weeks. = Admiral Sydney R. Freemantle, retired, writing in the magazine The Navy, said that from a naval viewpoint Italy’s entry into the war would be “little more than an an- noyance to the Allies. To Italy, on the other hand, it might well be disastrous.” Field Marshal Sir Archibald Mont- gnmm-‘hdnxbeu. former chief V2 | and better Allied planes of all types. | $14,312 in Donations Listed in One Day By Red Cross Total of $72,867 Collected Here for War Relief Fund Contributions to the Red Cross war relief fund will be rec2ived and acknowledged in the news columns if sent to the cashier’s office of The Star. Spurred by reports of increasing needs in Europe and encouraged by reports that local war relief fund collections mounted to $72,867.68, with contributions of $14,312 listed yesterday, volunteer workers of the District Chapter of the American Red Cross today redoubled their efforts to reach the local quota of $150,000. Federal Trade Commission em- ployes, with $484 contributed, dis- Suspect in Torch Murder Of Girl Surrenders By the Associated Press. WATERTOWN, Mass, June 1.— Watertown police prepared murder charges today against 23-year-old Frank Gomez, whose sweetheart, Katherine C. Nauer, 17, burned to death in his automobile yesterday after being stabbed into uncone sciousness. Capt. Edward Murray of the ‘Watertown police said Gomez, who surrendered while a motorist was telling Boston police he saw a dark man wielding a paring knife on & girl in an automobile 4 miles from where she died, was so hysterical that several days might pass before he could be brought into court. He was booked on “suspicion of murder” and held under police guard at Boston City Hospital for treat- ment of severe burns on his hands |and head. Medical Examiner Thomas M. Gallagher reported the girl died of suffocation by flames. Harold J. Prescott, who was re- porting the stabbing incident ot police headquarters when Gomez surrendered, said Miss Nauer was screaming that her companion was killing her. Mr. Prescott said he at- tempted unsuccessfully to intervene and then summoned police. By the time officers arrived, however, the MAY QUEEN TO WED—Miss Mary Lee Ross, University of Maryland May queen, will be married to Gustavus Warfield, editor of the U. of M. yearbook last year, in the Kappa Delta sorority house this afternoon after receiving her degree at commencement exercises this morning. —Star Staff Photo. placed the Treasury Department as top governmental donor for the day. Individual gifts included $500 each from George Theunis and Mrs. Wil~ liam Lawrence Breese, $1,000 from Mrs. Mary E. Stewart and from Mrs. Charles Warren; $200 from Mrs. Harriett P. Winslow and $300 from Mrs. Janet McCormick Goodhart. Girl, 5, Gives Up Candy. Mrs. L. W. Cheney, mother of Dr. Newcomb K. Cheney, who perfected the gas mask used by American soldiers in the World War, asked Red Cross workers to call at her home for her contribution. Berenice Ann Watson, 5-year-old resident of 417 North Thomas street, Arlington, Va., came to headquar- ters and contributed 39 pennies, which her mother said Berenice had other luxuries for a week. Another contributor, an aged col- ored woman, brought $5 and asked that her name be kept secret be- | cause she did not want her family to know she had made a gift that she could not afford. Chapter House Kept Open. The District Chapter house was to be kept open this afternoon to enable Government workers, who have just received their semi- | monthly pay checks, to participate | in the campaign. Representatives of the Red Cross were to display uniforms used in various branches of the Red Cross service in a fashion show this aft- ernoon at the Raleigh Hotel. The District Chapter announced that 14,000 surgical dressings were packed yesterday for shipment abroad and that 12,000 dressings had been shipped Wednesday night. of the imperial general staff in peacetime, wrote that Mussolini “has succeeded in raising a very noisy enthusiasm among the ignor- ant youth of the nation, who think there is glory for themselves to be got out of war. “When the bombs begin to fall and the machine-guns begin to rattle, this youthful and misguided en- thusiasm will quickly fade away.” More Planes Demanded. Retired Air Commodore L. E. O. Charlton wrote that a war with Italy would put the Allied Air Force on | the defensive immediately. This was only added fuel to the flery demands for “more planes” | brought back by the bruised and weary Tommies rescued from Flanders. Allied airmen were bold, daring and able, these soldiers were the first to admit. But against a Nazi air force estimated to have between | 10,000 and 20,000 planes, they de-| clared, the chief need was for more The latest word on the efTective- | ness of British planes was contained | in last night’s communique from the | Air Ministry, which told of “many direct hits” on German troop con- in raids by planes of the fleet air arm. the Nazis were bringing up rein- forcements, and were made with- out loss in spite of concentrated German _anti-aircraft fire. Colonial ¢ and traditional charm Keynoted by comfort in by rich, glowing tone preciated adaptability Group: Bed, $29.50 car had driven away. Mexico May Settle Claim Of Cities Service Co. saved by going without candy and By the Assoctated Press. MEXICO CITY, June 1.—Reports in usually well-informed oil circles today sald Mexico might effect an understanding with the Cities Serv- ice Co. to pay about $3,000,000 for the American concern’s Mexican | holdings expropriated with other | foreign petroleum interests in 1938,; The Mexican Ambassador to the| United States, Dr. Francisco Castillo | Nejera, himself hinted that the government was on the verge of reaching an agreement with an- other oil company. Mexico an- nounced last month that she had settled for $8,500,000 the claims of | the Consolidated Oil Corp. (Sin-‘ clair). The Ambassador said he had ad-| vised President Cardenas that “new companies in the future might| solicit a settlement.” He mentioned | no specific company. 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