Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 27 June 1941 — Page 13

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FRIDAY, JUNE 27, 1941 Gene Tierney Drops Parents As Agents in Contract Row

CIO STRIKES AT DOW CHEMICAL

Holds Magnesium Orders, CIO Machinists to End "Frisco Ship Tieup.

By UNITED PRESS A strike of chemical workers impeded operations at the Dow Chemical Co. plant, Midland, Mich.,

,tdday as another major labor dis-|

Pute in a defense industry ended. « The chemical division of the United Mine Workers (C. I. 0) called the Dow strike, Striking C. I. O. machinists meanwhile offered to join A. F. of L. members in returning to work at San Francisco bay shipyards. Their strike had been the most serious affecting defense production in recent weeks. Picket lines formed at the entrance to the Dow factory. Police kept the gates open but there was no immediate estimate of how many of the 4000 employees went through the picket lines. The plant has a Government order for magnesium. Protest Layoff

A Labor Board election has been scheduled at the plant July 8 to determine a bargaining agent. The strike was called in protest of disciplinary action against a service department employee who was laid off for two weeks on grounds of insubordination.

By a vote of 267 to 33, the C. I. O. shipyard machinists last night authorized union officials to sign agreements carrying the wage scale of the coastwide- labor stabilization bact fer the shipbuilding industry. Eight hundred A. F. of L. machinists voted Wednesday to return to work Monday under the

HOLLYWOOD, June 27 (U. P.).

who found fame under the Kklieg lights of Hollywood, today said she

‘| no longer needs parental assistance

in handling her affairs. The 19-year-old’s elopement with Count Oleg Cassini, fashion , design er, stirred her .. wealthy father's 7 anger and caused her wealthy par-

to a new contract. “The motio picture

cated . business,” Miss Tierney said, “that I have retained Mr. Leland Hayward, the well-known agent. to represent me. “I have the utmost love and respect: for my parents, but I believe my professional interest can be represented far better by a highly trained specialist in Hollywood.” In Bridgeport, Conn. her mother and insurance broker father, Howard S. Tierney, asked $50,000 damages from the film company and an

Gene Tierney

injunction prohibiting it from entering a new contract with their daughter. Superior Court Judge

action, on the grounds it should have been a breach of contract suit, but the Tierneys threatened to continue their fight in Federal Courts. ‘Mrs. Tierney came to Hollywood a

BOYS’ STATERS VISIT GAPITOL

agreement. C. I. O. officials scheduled a conference today with operators of three of the six struck plants. The A. PF. of L. strike affected five other shipyards. The walkout was ordered May 10 to win wage demands of $1.15 an hour and double time for overtime. The master agreement provided |; $1.12 and time and a half for overtime, Bethlehem Is Break

Need for skilled machinists hampered the shipyards, which have $500,000,000 in defense contracts. Lk The strikers rejected back-to>work appeals of union leaders and Government officials, including Presi-

dent Roosevelt. The critical break came Monday when the Bethlehem Shipbuilding

Co. operator of the largest plants, agreed to sign the master agreement. Meanwhile the Steel Workers Organizing Committee (C. I. O.) won collective bargaining elections yesterday in Bethlehem Steel plants at Johnstown, Leetsdale and Rankin. Pa, and in two plants at Los

Angeles. At Columbus, O., 156 A. F. of L. electricians returned to work today at the $14,000,000 Curtiss-Wright airplane factory, ending a nineday strike protesting employment of non-union workers for telephone installations. Five hundred workinen returned to their jobs yesterday after a onemonth strike at the Marathon Electric Corp., Wausau, Wis, which manufacturers naval motors. An 18-day strike ended yesterday at the Canister Co. plant, Phillipsburg, N. J., producer of containers for shells. A wage increase of 5% cents an hour was granted 250 employees.

The National Defense Mediation].

Board asked 2800 Pittsburgh truckers who have been on strike since June 1 to return to work pending board hearings scheduled to open Monday. The United Mine Workers (C. I. 0.) called a strike of 3000 workers at 14 plants of the U. S. Gypsum Co., which holds defense contracts. The union demanded a system of “multiple bargaining” for all plants.

WAR VETERAN READS HIS OWN OBITUARY

SPRINGFIELD, TIL. (U. P).—If a certificate of death and letters of sympathy from President Wilson and other national officers means anything, then Fred Hynes, a salesman, is among the American World War dead. Actually Mr. Hynes is in good health. He was discharged from the Army at Camp Punston, Kas. in 1919, after a period of. service with the Army of Occupation in Germany. Following the battle in the Argonne forest, Mr. Hynes’ family received word that he was dead. A more thorough check revealed that he had been wounded, and was in ‘a hospital at Vichy, France. ~ Almost a year later, however, the “family received an official death certificate from the adjutant declaring that Mr. Hynes had “died with honor in the service of his Suey on the 31st day of October, ‘191 The Secretary of Interior sent a letter of sympathy, as did President Wilson. Offers were received for construction of a tombstone at the Hynes’ grave in France. “The only-time they really had any reason to Lelieve I was dead,” . Hynes says, “was once when we were in Germany and the outfit ran across a barrel of wine in a freight car. We opened it, and during the party the fellow in command lost all our papers. Officially then none of us existed for a while.”

STOKOQWSKI RECEIVER ACTION IS SETTLED

The receivership suit brought

Officers to Make Courtesy Call, Lay Wreath on Plaza Cenotaph.

Officials and members of the Hoosier Boys’ State were to pay a “courtesy” call to officials of another state—the State of. sindionge today.

After lunch, the boys wore to pile in 10 streetcars at the Fair Grounds and- ride to the State House to visit Governor Schricker and to sympathize with the less happy Republican officeholders on the Supreme Court decision. The Boys’ State officials have a

pretty good idea of the State House | [®

situation. ' In their own election, the boys chose Roy E. Grimmer, Ft. Wayne, a Federalist candidate, as their governor, but, except for two others, the remainder of the 19 state officers chosen were Nationalists. They even failed to give the Governor a majority in the legislature, just as the Indiana voters did last fall.

Robert L. Munger dismissed the]

year ago after a New York stage

—Gene Tierney, Boston society girl success under a contract between

the studio and the Belle-Tier Corp., which consisted of her father and mother. The studio informed Mr. Tierney, however, that his daughter had not reaffirmed that contract and the studio was considering it abrogated. Mr. Tierney had been a party to the original contract because he was sending his daughter to the movies with some misgivings and * [definite feeling that she was too young for Hollywood. She appeared in three pictures and then, June 1, eloped to Las Vegas, Nev., with Cassini. Her father publicly disapproved that match. : Her latest troubles have been not only contractural and parental bit also medical. Her eyelids swell shut when she works under the glaring studio lights. Physicians who have treated her haven’t solved the rou.

From the State House, the Boys’ Staters were to march to the World War Memorial Plaza, where “Governor” Grimmer was to lay a wreath

Unknown Soldier. After a tour through Legion headquarters, the boys will head back by streetcar for the Fair Grounds. Tonight’s final assembly will be featured by a talk by Alvin M. Owsley, former Legion national com-

on the cenotaph in memory of the

WE'VE DONE A GOOD DAY'S

o| Re A AS Wek | "NEXT Cry ON “ CMY SCHEDULE,

THANKS TO THE PRIVACY I CAN XN | GET IN A WABASH DRAWING ROOM, {| FLL HAVE THIS REPORT COMPLETED. BY THE TIME | ARRIVE !

mander and former U. S. minister to Rumania, Eire and Denmark. Tomorrow, the boys will receive.| certificates and medals, and then leave for their homes.

0-9 INQUIRY. OPENS

NEW LONDON, Conn. June 27| (U. P.).—A naval board of inquiry began its investigation today into the sinking of the submarine O-9 off Portsmouth, N. H., a week ago, resulting in the loss of 33 officers and men.

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Linda's First Love 1:15 P. M. Hearts in Harmony 1:30 P. M. Editor's Daughter 1:45 P. M.

- PAGE 13

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