Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 4 November 1943 — Page 5
on
_ cation for a while.
" Omlinned Prous Page One)
#18 Worked in the store on Saturdays
-and during vacations.
_ Sometimes they swept out, then ware, Sgain they helped invoice, seated
near, the watchful eyes of their)
father. They went to high school in the building which now houses the English theater. Mr. George was ‘graduated from Normal College of the American Gymnastic union at Milwaukee and taught physical eduBut soon he was back in the hardware business.
Open Branches
During the depression the Vonneguts branched out to eight chain stores, the first one being in. Irvington. Government priorities have stripped their shelves of the old
g | black book in which he lists the
34 cup catsup 1 cup Kellogg's
res. Bake in hot oven Coout 80 minutes OF 20 minutes. '
mma ——-
-9¢ iY — a o_o
Delicious! Nutritious! xrrroca’s
Jima is a rich storehouse of pro-
ealcium, tron “Frei? Shmens {are Paul R. Brown, Marion county
urgently needed now! Try them
itty wo
THIS POWERS MODEL WEARS! * THOM McAN UNRATIONED SHOES
“Hina Jugosiav Hberation’ ariny com- 1
~
line of hardware. In its place are upholstery goods, cutlery and silver-
* household utilities, woven]
lg and paint, hotel and cafeteria equipment. and contractors, butchers and manufacturers supplies. The company gained international recognition when Carl J. Prinzler, an employee since 1887, invented the fire exit latch and named it VonDuPrin. The “Von” is for Vonnegut, “Du” for Dupont, an architect who aided in the design, and the “Prin” for Prinzler. Employees Own Stock
“Thirty-six Vonnegut ' employees are stockhplders in the company. Not long ago Mr. Pranklin and Mr. George resigned as president and vice president to give the younger
: | they go ‘to heaven” or leave.
EW gard for their employer. = | “We who are associates . adopt this festive occasion to tell
i |BORENSTEIN HEADS _ CITY PLAN SURVEY|:
-1 professional -“corelator”.
men a chance. “Mr;-Franklin carries a SHA worn
employees, marking them off “when Pred Hess, who first drove a spring wagon on deliveries for Father Vonnegut in. 1881, is now head buyer. Ed Galm has been there since 1898. When Mr. Franklin observed his
© [85th birthday, the 267 employees] | presented him with a framed scroll
on which they expressed their reIt read: . eagerly
you that we think of you affection-. ately as a lovable man of good will whose conduct has given us an example of gracious living.”
Louis J. Borinstein will head a five-man “master plan” committee named today. to undertake the task of co-ordinating current plans inte
a long-range development program,
City Plan Commission President John W. Atherton announced. The committee also will engage a 10, assist them in their plan reund-up studies. Others won the coniffittee
surveyor; Works Board President Harmon Campbell; City Engineer Arthur B. Henry and City Councilman Otto H. Worley. :
7 , Employees Held Prison ers: During’ West Coast Uprising.
SAN FRANCIS0O. Nov. 4 (U. P). —Demands for a, thorough investigation of nari in the Tule lake Japanese segregation center mounted today as the war relocation authority admitted that WRA National Director Dillon Myer and 75 other white persons had been held virtual prisoners there for four hours Monday. About 15,000 Japanese internees have been on strike at the center
ticipation in farm labor activities.
gon, whose boundaries meet hear | the camp, sent strong protests to | Governor Earl Warren of California; }
the western defense command.
_ Residents Fearful
Officials of Klamath Falls, just over the border from Japanese center, feared the towns-
Ore.,.
tension of the disturbances. Orville Grays, WRA official, gave the first official eye-witness account of Monday's disturbance, He said Japanese occupants of the center summoned a crowd of 5000 internees to the camp ad-
their own loudspeaker, he said, and
| persuaded Myer to speak.
The white members of the staff
‘WASHINGTON, Nov. 4 (U. P)— The senate appeared ready today to reverse its refusal 23 years ago to Join the League of Nations by ap-
proving overwhelmingly the princi ple of United States participation in ‘a general international organiza-|
. tion to maintain peace and security.
The vote may come this afternoon on the foreign relations committee's revised foreign policy resolution, which ‘now includes one of the most important sections of the Moscow declaration. . Actual membership in a new league, ‘once it is set up, still would require a two-thirds vote of the senate, since the pending resolution merely places the senate on record in favor of Such action.
since Oct. 15 in protest against par- |
Residents of California and Ore-
congressional ‘representatives and
the |
people might be menaced by an ex-}
ministration building without the! authority of the WRA. They set up|
and visitors “were told they could not leave the building, he said. Then the internees made speeches of their own in Japanese, he said. Dr. Reece Pedicor, chief medical. officer at Tule lake, was. “bruised and injured, but not seriously” in a fight with Japanese during the early part of the Smonsteation, Grays said. Ray Best, director of the center,
the uprising was instigated by a faction seeking to make Myer and visiting national officials promise them better food, ‘eiled streets and porches in front of camp homes.
REPORT JUGOSLAVS FORCE NAZIS BACK
LONDON, Nov, 4 (U. P.).—Cap-ture-of -the- town-of-Priboj; 60- miles southeast of Sarajevo, after a fierce battle with German and satellite troops, and - successful operations
jacross. the Hungarian border = by
Crotian ‘units “were rbported-today
3]
said In an interview last night that
But the
Eh ——— ELE
vote on this resolution is expected to exceed the two-thirds needed for treaty ratification. Bote The sudden and unexpected revision by the committee of {ts admittedly vague original resolution brought the issue to a voting stage quickly, and dissolved the objections of'a group which had been holding out for a ‘me specific statement of foreign policy. THe oreak came after eight days of debate and only two days after announcement of results of the Mqscow conference. Most senators had agreed that the
senate should make a declaration of | post-war aims now, to assure other! the .° United States |
nations . that would not again reject international | collaboration, The lssue Was wheth- |
a simple pledge of future co-opera~ tion would suffice, or should the senate expressly favor a definite international organization® The Moscow agreement, signed by representtaives of the four great allied powers and specifying “in-|s ternational organization,” provided |by the answer, The committee's original * resolution proposed merely that the United States “join with free and sovereign nations in the establishment and maintenance’ of international authority” with power to prevent aggression “and to preserve the peace of the world.” Yesterday, it added these two paragraphs; the first of which was Point No. 4 of the Moscow pact:
’" A 4
Rese lation Adopted by Senate Ravedls Ts "Changing View
“That the senate recognizes the
necessity of there being established at the earliest possible date a general international ~organziation, based on the principle of the sov4 equality of all peace-loving
by all such states, large and small, for the maintenance of interna-
tional peace and security, “That, pursuant to the consti tution of the United States, any treaty made to effect the purposes of this resolution, on behalf of the government of the United States with any other nation or any association of nations, shall be made only by and with the advice and consent “of. the senate. of the United
-
EE ee ES, hh] 'Ak:m°?t’oo© *
and open’ to membership
ters however, that “over approval of the pending ~~with virtually no opposition not mean that a treaty calling fo Joining a specific organization have such easy sledding. quarters feared that many tors who are voling ‘for ‘the eral principle of participation a new league might balk when thi details are presented. :
Reuln] Kea
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5 rey
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Toplice and the Croatian capital lat Zagreb, 60 miles southwest, The communique” said heavy
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[ Now He Totes
A Gun in Army
- WASHINGTON, Nov. 4 (U. P.).. —A Poinsett county, Arkansas, father of seven children who “ain't done nothing but raise ‘hell and drink lemon essence” for eight years is wig a gun in the amy
If he wonders why, he should | get someone to read the letter his wife wrote to his draft board and which ‘is printed in the current issue. of the Selective Service Bulletin, It said: “Pear United States Army: My husband asked me to write a recommend that he supports his family. He cannot read, so don't tell him. Just take him. He ain't no good to me. He aint done nothing but raise hell and drink lemon essence since I married him eight years ago, and ‘1 got to feed seven kids of his. Maybe you can get him to carry -a-gun.- He's good on squirrels and eating. Take him and welcome: I need the grub and his bed for + the kids. Don’t tell him this, but Just take him and send him as far as you can” The army took him after he tried to prove a bona fide family relationship by presenting the letter to his draft board.
DISTRICT 14 TO STUDY : i 14, emergency medical corps will be instructed on casualty Flution ponsdute ai 1:30 p,. m. toChristian “chure]
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