Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 14 September 1942 — Page 7
¥ Ria ie a Fe - USED PIPE SOUGHT
BY WPB OFFICE|
. The southwestern regional office - Foot the war production board wants
_ fo purchase used pipe and anyone having usable pipe of the dimen- ~ glons wanted is urged to get in touch with the WPB here. The order calls for 200 miles of eight-inch pipe, 100 miles of sixinch pipe, 250 miles of four-inch, "6807 miles of three or three and a - half inch pipe, 250 miles of two and & half inch pipe, 1000 miles of twoinch pipe, totaling 2470 miles. :
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A flooring material of ‘interest to home-makers is on display at the Patterson Shade and Floor Covering Co, 113 8. Pennsylvania st. Years of experimentation by the nation’s largest manufacturer of linoleum has brought to budgetminded home-makers an oppor=tunity to have genuine inlaid floors in the kitchen, bathroom or other rooms of the home at a cost far below that possible only a short time ago, Mr. Pate terson said. This fact is of particular importance at the present time to home-owners and householders
| who are anxious to decorate and
modernize their homes but wish to do-it inexpensively with the maximum of lasting economy. Many of these who have purchased smooth surface flooring in previous years will be surprised, to find that they can now pur‘chase an inlaid material at: oy slighlty more’ than the cost of “printed type. JowWacost vering, Mr. Patterson said. “Although a few years ago most of the public did not know one
type of resilient smooth surface
flooring from another, many qual-ity-conscious customers today |
| know that ‘an inlaid floor: :pro-
vides much longer wear ‘and ‘therefore, is the most economical | type to buy. The reason is that, - instead of the coloring and design being merely painted on the surface of the goods, they are actually inlaid into the material and extend entirely through to the backing so that they cannot
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be worn off by. scuffing feet” Because ‘most - types of genuine inlaid linoleum were more expensive than many people could afford. fo buy, the makers of the famous Armstrong’s floors launched a program to perfect a flooring that could be sold at low-
‘er prices, By developing a special
backing and achieving new economies of manufacture, the answer was found. The recently-introduced flooring product that resulted is called Armstrong's *“linofioor.” It has a
layer of genuine inlaid. linoleum.
“mix” securely keyed to a special, asphalt-treated felt backing. The layer of inlaid material is composed, as is all true linoleum, of oxidized linseed oil, ground wood, and color pigments. : The water-resistant backing. is equipped with “safety-back,” an exclusive: feature that. makes it possible ‘for the flooring to be ce-. mented down - securely: -without
lining and yet be removed when-
ever necessary: ‘without: damage’ to the: subfloor.
This ‘perfected floor ‘fiaterta) -
.offers several distinct advantages
in addition to the low cost, Mr. Patterson said.’ It is more comfortable. and quiet underfoot; it has a richer deeper beauty: "the. design is inlaid for enduring attractiveness; .it is more durable; it is a permanently fiat floor, and is reduces the-usual cost of in-
‘stallation. - Moreover, it is avail- |
able in numerous smart designs. Mr, Patterson said many different grades and thicknesses of these designs are available - for customers’ selection.
2 Insurance Men
Win Sales Honors
TWO INDIANAPOLIS insurance agents ‘have received national recognition for their sales during
‘August,
"Sidney Rice, general agent for. the’ Fidelity Mutual Life Insur-
ance Co. of Philadelphia, has been advised that last month he pro-
duced the largest amount of business for the company of any of its agents. | T. L. McCoy, Indianapolis representative of the Lincoln National Life Insurance Co. of Ft. Wayne, has received word that Be.
ranked among the first 25 sales
representatives of the company
in number of policies sold last.
month.
twill be arranged near
{life insurance ‘prob!
INDIANAPOLIS LIFE INSUR
{ Downtown. A
OUR 37TH. YEAR ag on |
OF OUR BEST po c
rgsentad «|| will begin with a discussion on the price of soybeas meal. on the “de-
surance in force over $125,000,000. Call or wiite for information on your
ANCE COMPANY
A"EDWARD B. RAUB, President. AiLEROY TORYIEUE, :
1052 Consolidated | ; Home Office, 2060 N. Meridian Street, TA-1501.
' challenges the other with 3 other's thallenge in rebuttal, below.
By NORMAN THOMAS Chairman, Ex: Post War|
THOMAS OPENS: 10000 Ameri-
-| can ‘citizens plus some 40,000 Japan- § | born relatives (ineligible for nat] | uralization), are in concentration |essary to ‘visit hardship: on a few. {camps behind barbed wire. Not a}
single charge has been filed against
| them., The basic authority for their
The embossed inlaid linoleum provides the fnishing touches to this’ Pennsylvania Dutch kitchen.
MOVES FREIGHT
BY AIR AND RAIL
Ward B. Hiner Forms New! Service Plans Larger
Quarters. A corporation for the transpose
‘over the continent has been organ{ized by Ward B. Hiner of Indianapolis under: the name of the Red, White & Blue Way, Inc, with main offices at 1101 E. 52d st. In addition to the buildings on the site the corporation plans to canstruct another building for general offices, storage, crating, packing and ‘preparing ‘household goods and other: freight for shipment, “It is alco tue plan of the corporas tion to establish at least 300 shipping centers irr the next year within the United States, Canada, Mexico and Central America. Soeasions| airs ports to. facilitate shipments: by air. ‘Mr, Hiner operated the Red Bail line here several years ago and has been active in the trucking) and transportation services. J
SAVINGS TOTAL BROWS IN JULY
$4,211 ,700 Added During One Month by Savings
And Loan Firms.
Hoosiers placed, $4211, 700 of new savings in Indiana's insured savings and loan associations during July according to a report of the Federal Savings and Loan Insurance Corp. The ‘amount thus brings the total of such investments to $124,787.000. Home loans amounting to $2,356,300 during the month were made by the Indiana associations, as compared with loans totaling $2,413,900 in June and $3,169,842 in July a year ago. Home mortgage loans on the associations’ boo now aggregate $115,686,300. During July new construction loans amounted to: $387,900 while
-
loans for home Purchase totaled $1,225,900.
AMERICAN SOYBEAN GROUP TO CONVENE
LAPAYETTE, Ind, Sept. 14 (U.
I P) ~The annual meeting of the
ing Tuesday at Purdue university;
| prosperous by Japanese.
tation of freight by rail and air|
“| evacuation from communities in| | which they demonstrated admirable ; citizenship, was a presidential order sommand
empowering = generals ing yas areasstiaus vo dea) with any of
SH eruis dictatorial power of dubious constitutionality, was inspired by popular panic originating from false stories of Japanese sabotage in Hawaii ‘(where Japanese are not in concentration ‘camps, and: nurtured by racial prejudice and desire to acquire farms and businesses made (As be expected, the vegetable supply went down; prices went up.) Although a guard shot a child “escaping” while playing. in the bushes, American /concentration camps are free: from overt cruelty. ‘But the temporary assembly centers | are shockingly overcrowded and in“sanitary. The permanent camps ndw building aren’t much better. ‘Wages range from $12 to $20 per month. This disgrace to our democracy cannot now be cured by a return to what was; it can be wiped out by full restoration of rights, compensation for losses, and rapid relocation of families as normal citizens of normal American communities. STOUT CHALLENGES: Mr. Thomas speaks of “false stories of Japanese sabotage in Hawaii.” He is wrong. The several hundred Japanese now in territorial concentra- | tion camps did not get there by beifg loyal citizens. As to the rest of the Japanese on the islands they account for one third of the population of Hawaii and. it would be just about impossible to confine them all. If it is a “disgrace” for a democé racy to protect itself against a danger most of its citizens regard as
graced. ‘Without a few such “disgraces” the United States might find herself tripping down the virtuous road that landed France in the arms of Hitler. - THOMAS REPLIES: Mr. Stouts reference to France beautifully fllustrates argument from emotion and prejudice rather than. logic and facts. Does he not know that France indiscriminately and brutally | interned all “enemy” aliens including refugees who hated Hitler? That act proved her lack of morale and added to it. The trouble with us is that in dealing with JapaneseAmericans, althdugh not with Ger-man-Americans, we have followed ther French example by methods which legally jeopardize eur own liberties and increase suspicion of us among the colored races. Already Gen. De Witt has taken the next step and is calling up
‘| American citizens at his pleasure
with 8 view to their evacuation.
100,000 HOOSIERS
More than 100, 000 Hoosier farmers Friday will select the men and
farm program for 1043 at AAA eleccounties.
county and township will be elected. These tommittees will be responsible to the state's AAA committee and Secretary of Agriculture Claude R. Wickard. L. M. Vogler is chair man of the Indiana AAA com- | mittee.
of the program farm women will
committeemien. In addition, AAA's
-| well .as ‘women farming in their own name to All who are participating in the rbd this
* | woRKERS GET Bonus DEME |! WALLPAPER STORE|
Each week to peradhs of national staadling.uaually. on n opposite sides of the fence—debate on subjects that have a special wartime significance. Each states his premise,
real, the United States stands dis-|
TO CAST AAA VOTE|
women to administer the national| . tions . in each of ‘the states 922i
A shree.mart committee. in each}
| Por the first time in the 10 years| be eligible to hold office as farmer-|"
articles of association are: being amended to permit farm wives as|
question, then answers the This week's debate appears
- REX STOUT
: | STOUT OPENS: It is an upfortu-
destruction of many it is often nec-
Among the Japanese-Americans now interned in the United States—many of whom owe allegiance to Japan as well as the United States—-there are|undoubtedly loyal citizens. But it would be dangerously optimistic to imagine that all of them have abandoned their faith in the infallibility of the Mikado, which is
PP
nationalism but also of the flourishing Shinto creed. Who is to say that they are ahy more reliable than the Japanese-Americans in Hawaii? ‘Before Japan attacked the United States, there were Japanese naval officers in the sampan fleet, Japanese subsidized ‘priests and teachers pro‘moting loyalty to the emperor in the shrine and schools of the plantation,
bling -as merchants.’ It was not by accident that the Japanese, with no reconnaisance whatever, were able to bomb Pearl Harbor with' a precision that indicated an uncanny knowledge of the disposition of the U. S. fleet. | With Japanese farms on the west coast so invariably located close to oil fields and industrial establishments, it is not inconceivable that such precise destruction as occurred
THOMAS CHALLENGES: My authority for denying Japanese-Amer-ican sabotage in Hawaii is the offi‘cial Tolan committee report which cites pumerous and detailed affidavits. I' do not quarrel with the arrest of individual Japanese, Ger-
in Hawaii.
true, proves any danger comparable to the danger of giving army com= manders the powers of totalitarian dictators over us. Our treatment of Japanese-Americans in contrast to .German-Americans among whom there seems to have heen far more saboteurs, illustrates the race prejudice which the Japanese government has exploited to our hurt among Asiatic peoples. . STOUT REPLIES: Hawaiian political linen is seldom washed in pub-
wrong ‘if it- reported no sabotage.
hood or Hawaii prove conclusively the singular lack of loyalty among the Japanesse-Americans in Hawaii. Mr. Thomas seems determined to
act. That is not the point. Here and now I say the Japanese-Americans include more fifth’ columnists than any other comparable group in the country, and I reiterate that in interning those from the west coast for the duration, the U. S/ government has exercised sane foresight. Shifting - Japanese and Japanese-|' Americans inland hardly constitutes
uthor and Chairman of the|
not merely a product of Japanese
and Japanese fifth columnists dou-| :
at Pearl Harbor could be: repeated
Nothing Mr. Stout says, even if|}
lic, ‘but the Tolan committee: was| The congressional hearings on state-}
= 2
ii
-
nate fact of war that to prevent the}
answered, almost hysterical." “No, he is right here with me. He is seriously hurt, but my doc tor thinks he should be moved home at once. Wire me $125 in care of Western Union and I will send him on the next plane with
man said.
“I'll wire you the money,” Mrs,
“But he is dead,” the mother
my sister, who ls a- nurse,” the
get that man, and when we do, he will, wish he’ were dead.”
principal speaker. women ate eligible to join the group. Mrs. Beldon D. Léwis will discuss community clubs and Mrs. Ronald Hazel will speak on. the control of: cancer. Mrs. Merril Christie will sing, accompanied by Mrs, Harald
Orman.
mans and Italians but with the|j wholesale internment of citizens practiced on the west coast but not}
argue the merits of the Exclusion]
Watch them "Come and get it” when you start . your dinner with a rich OLp Quaker ‘cocktail. Isa taste- winner because no greater whiskey goes into, any shaker than Ow QUAKER . distilled from choice grain, then aged 5 pa
totalitarianism.
FILTERE
‘Al smoke and dust
BUT . 3 Sar
STRAIGHT BOURBON WHISKEY «86 PROOF « THIS WHISKEY 1S 5 YEARS OLD « THE OLD QUAKER C0., LAWRENCEBURG, IND.
HOW TO MAKE YOUR CLOTHES LAST LONGER
Hang Your Clothes CORRECT! LY oon.
Be sure there's plenty of room between the - various garments in your. closet. Avoid over-
crowding and jamming.
D AIR TUEANING
is removed from ihe air used for drying.
‘GASH AND : GARRY . We buy usable wire garF mest Dang.
