Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 13 February 1945 — Page 9
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A. F. of L. Orn: Federal VOLUNTEERS FOR JOB - Control of Veterans’ Jobs AT ARMY AIR DEPOT
(Continued. From Page One)
under a system administered from Washington. In co-operation with Veterans organizations, the A. F., of L. hopés to develop methods. for dealing with the cases of servicemen ‘disabled either in combat or in war industry: One aim of the labor program will be directed against increases in group insurance premiums which would discourage employers from hiring Jlarge numbers of partially disabled workers, A. PF, of L. leaders say the injury rate among handicapped persons already returned to in-
dustry justifies no: higher rates. ,
for compensation risk.
Local controls over veterans’ reemployment already have proved successful in Los Angeles. A. F. of L. spokesmen say, and state federations and local councils will be urged to lead similar community programs. The A. PF. of L. chiefs foresee little difficulty in protecting the seniority rights of the 1,500,000 A. F..of L. members now in the armed forced The A. F, of L. is now discussing with veterans’ organizations the advisability of adding the time of service in the armed forces in computing a veterans’ industrial seniority. The council laid . aside other matters today to resume consideration of the proposed reaffiliation of John L. Lewis and his 600,000 United Mine Workers. President Willlam Green presented Lewis’ reply to the council's! latest letter setting forth terms of the re-entry and provid-
decision, including the submission | of any ruling to the national convention, Leaders of thie movement to reinstate the U. M. W., suspended from A..F. of L. in 1936 after Lewis’ formation of the C. I” O,, were confident that the niine chief's conditions would not stand in the way of the reunion. Stilt awaiting’ action of, the council was the dispute over jurisdiction in machine - repair work between the International Assoeiation of Machinists, largest A. F. of L. affiliate with 700,000 members, and the Union of Operating Engineers. President Harvey W. Brown of the machinists has been empowered by his union to call a 1945 convention to. authorize withdrawal from the A. F. of L. unless other affiliates are curbed. Meanwhile, the A. F. of L. was threatened with another secession as a result of its decision yesterday awarding Daniel J. Tobin's teamsters’ union jurisdiction over storage room employees in west coast canning plants. Federal unions representing 105,«
000 cannery workers had charged |
encroachment by the Tobin union. The cannery unions, claiming that storeroom workers also work as food processors, had asked to be
affiliated with the A. F. of L, Sea- | farers Union or be given permis- |
sion ‘to form an international council -and, eventually an international union of -their- own,
A. E. Bilger, spokesman for the
unions, had warned the council that his followers might go pver to
the C. I. O. {f the teamsters were |
upheld.
Phillip Gomez, 1025°N. West st. a
|naturalized Mexican who fought with U. 8. forces in world war I,
again has offered his services. “I saw a piece in the paper that you needed help at the Indiana fairgrounds (army air forces depot) and since T cannot fight any more I thought I would come out and help ~you,” Mr, Gomez told Col. Frank J. Hills, commandant of the depot. He was employed as a Janitor in the garage. ;
LINCOLN PLAY GIVEN BY ATTUCKS PUPILS
Crispus Attucks high school students yesterday presented “Glimpses into the Life of Abraham Lincoln
| During the Civil War” over Station
WIBC. The cast included Sylvia Carpenter, Emma Oir, Lauranne Browne, Otha Porter, Myron Thomas, James Buchanan and Harry. Brooks. Dr, Joseph C. Carroll, social sclence instructor, wrote the play.
THE INDIANAPOLIS ES
(Continued From Page One)
not help us, lick Japan later. Roosevelt's only ace was the power to withdraw from the war unless Stalin agreed to a fairer
compromise. Actually, however, neither Roosevelt nor the Ameri can people would stop fighting before Germany's defeat—even if we had .not pledged to stick to the end, Everybody knows that, including Stalin. As a result; Stalin got what he “wanted at Yalta with few exceptions. : The most important exception was Stalin's agreement that the entire German military system, as well , as nazilsm, must be eliminated permanently. Earlier he had publicly favored a postwar German army. Since most of the other terms to be imposed on Germany were kept secret pending unconditional surrender, they cannot be evaluated now. Through war criminals would be punished, no specific reference was made to
“free Germany committee.”
the junker generals on Stalin's”
Whether Germans are to be used as slave labor, as they have used “others, was not mentiohed: Germany must pay reparations in kind—Stalin wanted that, while other allies have, been un-
decided or divided at home. This apparently eliminates, or modifies, the “Morgenthau plan” for deindustrializing Germany. Roosevelt. got reaffirmation of the Atlantic -Charter pledge of self-government for liberated. peoples; first by broadening the representative base of the Russian puppet--provisional regime of Poland and. Yugoslavia, and by promising later free elections. But of course the territories taken by Russia will have no such elections. Whether -there can be really free voting elsewhere in eastern Europe, after a period of rule by Red-dominated regimes, is questionable. : Nominally, the President won a point id gétting ‘a united nations conference called for April in San Francisco. Hut, whether Mr.
* Stalin“ will have veto power over
any league action relating to
—Russia, as he insisted at Dumbarton, is still a secret.
~Anyway, according to the Yalta |
plan, the San Francisco conference will. not consdier the peace settlement but only the machinery for a later security league. It is
supposed “to prepare the charter of such an organization along the lines proposed . . . at Dumbarton
Oaks,” which sounds rather rub-.
berstampish. The Polish settlement was the payoff. - Roosevelt agreed to Russia taking eastern Poland up to.a slightly modified Curzon line; whether to include additional southern Polish cities and® oil
fields, as previously agreed to by
Churchill, was not stated. .
Poland -is to get “substantial”
territory in the north and west-— the original Stalin plan. to load her with large slices of Germany, making Poland a perpetual Russian puppet for defense of a larger “Alsace-Lorraine.” Since Stalin always has refused to discuss his seizure of the Baltic states and other territorial grabs; they were not mentioned.
The chief fault of oe Yan settlement, good or bad, is that the Big Three try to dictate des cisions which only the united na« tions as a whole can make—either in justice or with any chance of stability. The only Yalta refer ence to a peace conference com« cerns the German eastern frontier, France is granted an undefined. German occupation zone, and there is-a vague promise to cone sult other nations on matters of their direct interest—as though the whole - European - settlement does not concern them! Thus to shut out the other united nations, who have suffered occupation, is fantastically un workable. The peace will depend largely on the continental nations, none of which was at Yalta, If
‘ they are ignored now, they will be
wooed by some future Hitler, They cannot be bound by agreements to which they are not a party, and some have said so. The The full united nations confer. ence at San Francisco should review the Big Three political settlement.
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with one les | shall be settled by the council. | unced yesterd nr adwen PR “ir. Lewis reporcaly was in| BOY SCOUT PROGRAM e, Phillips st | sisting that he retain the usua | o short of | Hants of appeal from sny council | SET AT PARK SCHOOL under the reco —
The annual Boy Scout program will be presented Thursday morning |at Park school, sponsored by the
as impossible, termine whic
MONEY
last season h Boise a! Park school Father's club. | 2 this time, En 5 de J F DIAMOND. Lt. Harry Ice, former eagle scout : SS 2 9. KK. . AUTO—FURNITURE—DIAMO and past president of the Indian- Le
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{8 p. m, tomorrow at the home of
{ apolis Boy Scout council and now {public - relations officer at Great | Lakes, 111, naval training station, will speak. | A wounded veteran and former | eagle scout from Billings hospital | also will address the students. Offi-| { cers of Central Indiana council, Boy | | Scouts of America, will be guests at | she program. Prof, John Caldow, Resdmaster, and John Hare, president of the Father's club, are in charge of ar-| rangements. |
36=Inch Spring RAYONS ® ALL HAND WASHABLE! ® FLORALS!" STRIPES! DOTS!
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36-Inch White Sani-Sheeting Suitable for infants’ cribs or sickwus 1o39
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| { t I= |
SUITINGS
| Mrs. Robért : Axum, 2542 N. Hard- - Thirty years ago, in Forbidden |under the guidance of the greatest ing st. ‘ pet, behind the highest mountains [mystic he ever encountered during| n d Hshman his twenty-one years in the Far p the world, a young Eng oJEast He wants everyone to experi- . : amed Edwin J. Dingle found the‘ ence the greater health and the legislative hystic opened his eyes. A great | Wil ire on Rn ee C 1: : u hange came over him. He realized fortune. ‘He had been honored by alendar he strange Power that Knowledge fellowships in the world’s leading TT on ives. { geographical societies, for his work ‘That Power, he says, can trans- as a geographer. Ang today, 30 BILLS PASSED. hatever they are, can be answered. | capable of so much work, so young| sg 74—Amends_ public officials 1iw to problems of health, death, pov- {in appearance, it is hard to believe | allow justices of peace office rent, teleare wrong, can be salved. he has lived so long. one’ expenses, clerical help and misIn. his, own case he was brought| As a first step in their E. Ghiepao; Frobinits 13 wo Eiper calecton PENNEY'S—Second Floor. ie k to splendid health, He acquired toward the Power that" KiWioags of fees for this ir 4 S establish and control ai t d aviarofessional - recognition, Thirty readers of this paper a 9000-word tion. fuctities through ‘appointive a ago, he was sick as a man treatise. He says -the time has|kon comm sions. puld be and live. Once his “an veut for" it to be released to the Bis Droceed LI i [1) g bought. Years of almost con- | Western World, and offers to send | than mandatory. uous tropical fevers, broken’it, free of cost. or obligation, 10 | commissioners to - enable them to purpnes, near blindness, privation and | sincere readers of this notice. For | chase tiospital property at Rushville foljoking issuance oy hands. (40-0) | J i v im, physically and mentally. tute of Mentalphysics, 213 - SOUth | county borrie of education” cotnmeted of | gust visualize yourself in He was about to be sent back to| | Hobart Blvd., Dept. N-388, Los An- | township trustees and county school| > ing rayons and gland to die, when a strange geles 4, Calif. Readers are urged t ands. and 1 J , : essage came—"They are waiting [to write promptly, as only a limited on he ow =” a Sesnang for spring. br' you in Tibet.” He wants to tell {number of the free books have been | SB 18-Amends housing authority law| Ye See Of Avptal hole world what he learned there, | printed. ry ona Dt pum te Re- | Ing shades. 8 Inches wide. PENNEY'S-~Second Floer.
nswer to this question. A great Power, which there came to him, hrm “fie "Yife” Of anyone, “Ruestions; {years Tater; he 15 “Sti so AtAleNe, momma aoa a ealth, too, as well as world- -wide | gives, Mt, Dingle wants to send to 114 — Authorizes municipalities to 141= dn A urity of ~ county 4 D anger had made a human wreck of [your free copy, address The Insti- HOUSEHO / V1 superintendents and enables them to res | soft suitings . . . so much
quires that housing authority be composed 3 of residents and these over. 35 and be ’ bonded to amount of $15,000. (42-0)
y : SB 204 — Authorizes county commisDoctors Way to Relieve
CONSTI PATION
Prodaces More tr Like®
It you feel Doyth Huvetone i cuttally -ghull; have headaches, Upset stom
‘ach with gas, bloating due to HB 72-Raises salaries ‘of Indianapolis “constipation—don’t take harsh, ; i \ municipal court’ judges to $7500 a year. ( i <2 wed te b ng laxatives which often oo 3 HB 74—Raises salaries of municipal
‘gripe and leave you so weak. | , try this Physician's ou bailiffs from $2000 to $2400 a year.
own purely vegetable formula HB 136—Revises Lake county superior Dr. Edwards’ Olive Tablets! “HB To Reconatitut state Insurance § es Bo Yar Hoek Ten départinent, legalizing Arta of former inne suran ment. -1) ‘give you the most thorough, com- bright as a dollar tomorrow, Cau C15 Require fortable and more natural-like tion: use as directed. 15¢, 30¢, 60¢.
DR.EDWARDS Obie 7ablets
coo |
EPAER AC OF TEETH
UPPERS AND LOWERS
LHL TEEN
sioners to provide for the preparation: of plans for the physical development outside incorporated areas. (43-0) 209—Authorizes state auditor to sell real estate at Indiana Soldiers’ home at Lafayette to a Catholic church for erec-| tion of a chapel, Prohibits sale for any (36-2) -
FOR THE WARMEST
other “use. " House i HB 252—Provides cities of 2500 or more may consolidate only by petition of 20 per cent of qualified voters of both come munities. (80-1) ‘HB 273—Legalizes real estate sales by sheriffs after mortgage foreclosures. (86-0)
Bio 19e| Jer 19-
bowel movements you've ever had, .No griping or weakening effects, Just complete satisfaction! So take Olive Tablets tonight to feel
HB 215—Requires that at -least ‘50° per J cent of motor vehicle highway account fund allocated to cities and towns shall be used for street and alley repair and construction. (70-13 HB 226—Removes township trustees ~. | board. (80-0) HB 230--Amends, act concerning cone solidation of unincorporated 5th class cities and towns. (80-0) i HB ' 306-Creates bi-partisan public health council. (86-0) HB 307—Doubles salaries of part-time health officers. (84-0) HB 308—Fstablishes department of public health at Indiana university. (20-0) SB 8—Authorizes establishment of joint high schools by adjoining counties under certain conditions. (79-0
i
ower to Investigate rom state welfare
advisory
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