Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 25 November 1941 — Page 2
factory today. 5. . A spokesman for Curtiss-Wright i:
- shift to continue greatly ‘cu Prfustion.
: racks ‘worth $100,000,
Bon a general rail strike.
9% as the date for starting a general]
= Matter of Hours. =
By UNTIED ~RESS ‘A gtuieral strike ot machinists in
She St. Louis metropolitan areal:
‘threatened to close a huge aireraft|
said “enough . welders, riveters snd
‘other- workers: engaged -in the final|’
, of aircraft = fabrication . Te ' sages for work te 8 a. ; He:said; -hewever,: dt | y a matter of. hours. until
the lant would be completely shut
The plant has defense con- : “The strike also™ : ‘Donnell Aircraft Corp., ‘which has $4,500,000 in contracts for airplane parts, and the Busch Sulzer Corp. which holds :$15,000,000 worth of ganivacts for naval ordnance.’
No Progress in Rail Talks =
In Washington, -spokesmen for raliroad management and labar-re-ported to President Roosevelt on : their. apparent lack of progress in negotiations for settlement of a} wage dispute which . threatens. to}
Thé brotherhoods have set Dec.
walkoyt of the 1,150,000 rail workers. A. F. Whitney, president of the Brotherhoon of Railway Trainmen, “has warned management that he would again fecommend Governnient operation of the roads for the duration’ of the entergency if ‘the
osed the Mc- a
last events in the. ori f Potentste Judge Dewey Myers,
Fries and’ August Steloft.
Ball, Kenneth Badger, Calvin
near Bir El Geb, Libya, the’ gs : : command said today. - BE en
I British brigade herdested ‘asa climax} as
to an encircling: “movement -staried {PY_Bxis forces Sunday, : ~
command ation Habe tion with land fo: home an {machine gurmed British: troops, ins : |cluding the gartison at Tobruk. Italian land faces to have re 5 k “thrusts . from Tobruk, despite: British artils on. ; 6 comman admitted that A. Richey, W. E Busbtons: Le >. |British forces were attacking Gondar, last Italian stronghold in northwestern Ethiopia. British ar“‘Htillery and aircraft were reported -jrombarding it.
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| SIE 2 E Reuben James Sank With Flag Flying, Sa moreso recmimenasd by the euben ames an I ag ying, r" Says esident’s boar Production of aircraft parts ‘re- Offi Fi U. S. Ww. hi G Di {CHOIR TO ASS oa 5 icer on First arship to Go Down SY Corp., Chicago, which was closed by CHURCH CELEBRATION ES atdown strike of 650 workers yes-| NEw YORK, Nov.: 25° (U. ‘P).—rall, had been demaiished and car-| “The ‘feliows were "+ ehigriuL The concert choir of the Ct ; JRtay als of the A. I of L. team. | ZI¢ deétoyer Reuberi- James, mior- ried away. ‘The gunners mate at|though, and a iot of them were Studios of Music will the Jentral { a cials o A. F. 0 tally wounded by: a German for-]Gun No. 6 told me that fone of theljoking, calling ‘eath other Mack |celobration of th the Sters’ union and Midwestern {truck- | pedo which” caused ‘an’ expldsion ‘in [officers’ ‘or any one’ In the living|Sennett bathing beauties .and ac- a a 4 edermurial Baptist] | ing. 3. sumpanies meet today In an her forward magazine, ‘Was sinking {quarters forward: had. been saved*lcusing each gther of putting their | Spcroy® 50th anniversary Friday. |} gout lo settle a strike of 3500 motor in the misty dawn of Oct. 31, west| He. ‘ordered the . survivors toifeet m the Water to see If it Was| oro og oopions dirests the choir, * freight handlers at Chicago. - " |of Ireland. : abandon ship, and the ‘three re cold ‘before they “jurnped. Se -| which is composed of 16 voices, and vor. Oakland, Cal, 4500 welders| vq bridge had Been blasted ang | maining life rafts cast-off. 'Three| "Tn another 30 minutes, the sur-|{ MIS. Graham Meggenhofen is aoae aE ee i . Sathe & foredsrl already wag Yi a the two an Nowa away. as well -83|vivors had sighted another Aperi-| a for the choir, which will | : : ter. ‘T cers had : . he seven. officers , can vessel, which, attracted . by present a Thanksgiving cantata,
Francisco Bay shipyards holding . Twenty minutes after the men $672,000,000 in contracts for. naval | ica 5 the explosion and the com- oo" "ll. Tats, the Reuben James BS, Se. Horgside. andjgymns of Praise” in the: church and merchant vessels, volved upon ‘a chief petty officer. Wonks dawn, y Je Syars and Stripes. ai : “jFriday, are: Mrs, Pauline ;Bade, s0Ww Sf flying from her poop. : |prano; Miss Helen Jones, contralto; a0 Bt, a ty: | “When the Reuben James went| STATE FIRM GETS CONTRACT. (Richard M. . Shoop, tenor, and chinists’ mate from Charlestown, downr we felt bad because: up to| WASHINGTON, ‘Nov. 85 -(U-P:).— George Edward Lucas, "baritone. S. C., took-off his shoe and daintily that time the ship was nearby in|Army contracts awarded today in-|Robert Marple is in charge of music dipped -his toe into the thick oil the water and we felt we had com- [cluded one to Noblitt-Sparks Indus at the Memorial church, of which | scum covering the ocean to ascer- pany,” he said. “After it went down |tries,: Ine: - Columbus, ods ‘ammu- the Rev. George G. Kimsey is pas» tain the temperature of the water we felt all alone—like we were lost. nition: $792,648. . “{tor.
into which he soon was fo plunge, |. hoping to live. “It was cold,” he said last night.| He. arrived . yesterday with 42 others of the 45 survivors on the naval . Algorab, Including the officers, these men.lost 100 |shipmates. in this .first sinking of | an. American warship in the present war, ) Chief Petty . .Officer William Henry Bergstresser, 35, of Pittsburgh, whom the torpedo put in command, described the disaster matter-of-factly.. “I was on watch in the forward|. - engine , rjom at. 5:30 .a. m, when| - | we felt’ the impact,” he said. AeTheére were two explosions and the second sounded like the . magazine: The ship whipped - and~ shook, - The|' lights went out and the steam flow was interrupted. . There was a sinking’ motion of the ship and she went down by the bow. “I went topside and found that the entire i0rward. part,’ bridge 3nd
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