Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 46, Number 201, Decatur, Adams County, 25 August 1948 — Page 2
PAGE TWO
• credit. For economy and satisfaction finance your next car wjth a bank auto loan. bank ESIABI ISHEI) 1883 ■h kk ~sradFindecatiiF Step right up and ask for. luiri-fectiori! * fsflRHI fig». <66 £ V li W?jr> WC ZSI JEmLJk. X - I ' . I’ll Know You’re Talking About The Product That Makes Me Proud — Phillips 66 Premium Motor Oil I Man this “Lubn tcction" is something to boast about! It means the two things you get with Phillips 66 Premium—lubrication plus protection! Here’s a motor oil with all the great lubricating qualities you just naturally get from fine base stocks and expert refining, plus additives and inhibitors that protect by helping to lick sludge, carbon and varnish deposits. That's a lot in one quart of oil but Phillips 66 Premium's got it! Why don’t you switch to “Lubrttectum” today! 46 “Labridection' , —the protection rendered bp on oil •/ fine bate stock containing special detergent and oxidation inhibiting ingredients.
Knapp * Service Cor. 2nd A J » chiton patter- Ind
Phil L Macklin Co. Finrt & Madison St. Decatur. Ind.
'I BML a I AtwflHß L IflMlw .cfflErEMHy/ f ■ riMnijjo w . fln agA OKjfWV ski' mi iBP Er a J Bran A J *- , rV H 3KA >■. Jl SICMTARY OP DIFBNSB James Forrestal meets with Joint Chiefs cd Stiffat U. 8. N*val War Newport, R. I. From left: Maj. Gen. A. M. Greunlher, staff director, Joint Staff; Gen. Koyt B.Ven- , denberg. Air Force ehief; Adm. Louis E. Denfeld, chief ot naval operations; Gen. Omar WMliy, Army chief: Forrestal; IX Gen, A, C. Wedemeyer. director of plans and operations; Vics Adm. A. W. Radford, wee naval chief; Lt. Gen. Laurie Norstad. deputy Air Force chief. (I nttr notions!)
Asks Printer Union Cited For Contempt Government To Ask Federal Court Move Indianapolis. Aug 25—(I'Pi The national lalcor relations board today urged a federal judge to punish four top officers in the AFL Typographical Union for alleged disobedience of a court injunction. The request was made in a petition filed before Judge Luther M. Swygert. who last March 27 ordered the union to obey the Taft-Hartley law ip dealing with more than SOO newspapers. Jack G. Evans, regions' director of the NLRB, asked Swygert for an order requiring the union and its officers to show cause why they should not be adjudged in civil contempt of court, and upon return of the order to ad judge them in contempt for "having violated and disobeyed" terms of the decree. The petition said that the ITT had insisted on its local unions standing pat on a contract form "without material change" ffi negotiations with newspaper publishers It said the contract form contained "clauses and provisions which cause employers to discriminate with respect to employment of journeymen and apprentices in newspaper composing, rooms on the basis of membership or non-membership in the ITI " The union was accused of refusing to approve contracts proposed by local unions In negotlaions at Chicago. LaSalle. 111.. New York City. Athens. O. Cin cinniati. Huntington. W. Va.. West Palm Beach, Fla . and Sacramento, Calif. The NLilB charged that the ITC officials ordered that the subnance of the contract form issued by international headquarters
Kelvinator's * "Automatic Cook" 1 Electric Range COOKS tVMM£^ A^ AY I wzf wits AW *’*mX’'*’ M ■ *319’95 I • ?** *»Meht ** frw " 11M.5® ■ • ' «ZX.7' k “*- »- a ®L /* **•*«-I K' I DON’T MISS Ml INO TVt • . V ’■: >t T» • Imsgmr! Now yen can take the • Snaring new eratrenimre. New afternoon off... onvtMoe... enmr "I p-ftown*’ Lnit gn «a you a 4th home to a piping hot dinner. Yee. •°” * • thrtlir S“>«-h Juat aet the “ Automatic Conk” Bettie. 4. at the fli. koi a wrirt! control... the ringa Am the mt! ® Giant broilers en ludda a 25-lh. turkey with eat*. Warmer drawer. • Brilliant new Control Panel... aeven-heat warfare unit*, and a Now all contr.la doaen other wonderful laaturee few arc eaaaer to roach... eaawr to read. extra value! - CouUL-l TS- ff a hr J »«’ a t f' ’■ • •• DECATUR HATCHERY Phone 497 — Vecatwr
DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT, DECATUR. INDIANA
■ must be covered" in order to i I get international headquarters to a pitrove. It said the ITU had "made rial* meats 'hich had the effect of Inducing subordinate local unions to cause or attempt to cause employers .... to discriminate again*: non-members of the ITI'.” One of these statements, the NLRB said, was made at Rochester, N V . by Charles Lyons, an ITI international representative Lyons was accused of saying during negotiations with the Gannett Newspapers that the ITU w-ould iiave a closed shop by one means or another. The NLRB also cited a letter ITI' president Woodruff llandalph wrote to the New York City local I <i, April 19. saying that a pro-I vision "must lie eliminated" which he said would give nonunion printers in the greater NewYork area preference over union members from outside New York. The petition also charged that the ITU ‘supported, sanctioned and encouraged" strikes in the newspaper industry by continuing to pay lieneflts to striking printers. Evans filed the petition on behalf of Robert N. Denham, general counsel for the NLRB. Denham's representatives, head ed by Winthrop A. Johns, will tell Swygert there Is no alternative but to <-rack down on the unions and its four top officers with a civil contempt of court proceedings If the judge- grants the government's request, the union and its officers will be called before the court to answer the government's charges. Stiff fines and |M>ssible jail sentences could follow if they are found gui ty. The four men tu be named in the government's complaint are union ore- blent Woodruff Ran dolph and international officers iatrry Taylor. Elmer Brown and Don Hurd. The union's difficulties with the publishers and the law start-
| ed just a year ago when the TaftI Hartley law went into effect. The law stipulated that no union could demand a closed shop contract from an employer. Closed shop agreements for printers have been a tradition in the newspaper publishing industry for years and the union wanted to maintain them. The International union, therefore, Instructed its locals not to
IT HAS THAT SMOKED-IN Country Flavor — FRESH Smoked Sausage 59c Lb. . GERBER MEAT MARKET PHONE yoj
— """" 11 1 —a— ■ ii ——mm — iiai ,!■.■■■ , 11 ■■ ,n „„ .^a,,oamaMna—' ■■■■ i.i.hu-i.w—- --— i Everywhere it gees Everybody goes...f 0r a «A 1— y Llkfl IIIUI K I v4\' ■' l -
i.«J MW. travail fast ... ami the talk *fewy lowa day. M the new Kutur.nuc (JUUmoUle! People everywhere are patting the word a |«mg shoot this .pertscular new 19 Iff ucodel. » her ever it goes, people just naturally gather 'round !•* a better view. It • the Futuramic appeal of this esdUng •ew OldMMhife! They lie iu aew UA -Z dramsts .weep «t iu ultra-co.Jem line. . . . the .tnkmg
(»"“* OLDSMOBILE TT"YOUR OLDSMOBILE DF 1 1 F i -—-— ■ ZINTSMASTER MOTOR SA LES COBNEH IST« MONROE SAU! * w . '7.1....' Mm. N.BM, '
sign written contracts. It okder ed them to post a list of terms In newspaper plants stating under what conditions! their members would work. One of these ' terms" amounted to a continuation of the closed shop. Some publishers refused to agree to Giese “terms of employment" and the union refused to bargain for written contracts. Newspaper sirikea were threatened. and in some instances, actually were called. The American Newspaper Pule lishers' Association, representing more than 800 newspaper*, ap pealed to Denham to force the union to bargain in good faith within the law. Denham, in turn, went to Swygert and obtained the injunction to stop the union from making what he called "illegal" contrac t demands at least until the full five-man labor board could decide what Is and what is not legal. Trade In a Good town — Decatur
IVS EASY TO BUY A NEW CAR under the Bank and Agent Auto Plan. Both car purchase and insurance can be financed under most favorable conditions. Ask for complete information. THE SUTTLES CO. Agents Niblick Store Bldg., Decatur, Ind. Ufwaeatuig TU Am Caeaalry Md Suany Compeoy of Hamfaad, Cm*. , Jhiilftilll-
Congressman Gillie Will Tour District Rep. George W. Gillie will make a tour of the fourth congressional district beginning Aug. 28, it was announced today. Congressman Gillie will Ice In Adams county on September 8. At 9:80 in the morning he will Ice at tlce Berne poatoffice and at 11 o'clock, will Ice at the Geneva post-
. .... || . ... i u in RwA - wjM&l JM
! LEE HARDWARE CO.
C UktTl)is...l'mdeo4) ? to the World J (mow I'm ( to Sene you! J keep your telephone olive Please replace your telephone receiver on the hook when you have finished talking. If you don't, your line will give a "busy" signal and you will not receive incoming calls. Should yours be a party line and you fail to replace the receiver, the whole line will be "dead." Be a good neighbor — cooperate. CITIZENS TELEPHONE CO.
simplicity of its interior design. And they g*> fnr its Futnramic performance. 100 ... thanks to Hydra-Matic Drive's* clutch, driving rase and the thrill-fill<-d acti’Mi of M HIKL.-tH 4F. Everyone's spreading the good new. about tho great new Oldsmobile fnr everywhere thr Futurami' everybody "goes for” the Futuramie! No wonder more and more people are saying -"lts >.M \K I' to Own an Old.:
WEDNESDAY. AUc llgT
Office Ills visit to from 1 to 3 o'c lock j D th.’/W at the Decatur postof.j the afternoon he wll | ton. >! < IS Persons having i, government are i nv , te< with Mr. Gillie ~n hi, >|, 4 • points. Kansas, Nebra-ka. M<ntu M are the hading wheat -.?H states of the I'
I IVANHO! 3-burner kerottnt 4 Cook Slove i / n two- and four-bimu I models also avoilobk S 3 Mod, b, I Perfection Steve I
