Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 27 November 1944 — Page 7
Shoes arott's cifica- ) price best town! beat!
0
MONDAY, NOV. 27, 1944
| 308 GAS STATIONS
for rationing violations between nounced today.
transfer of 73,261
gasoline. “
An OPA amendment permitting dealers to obtain a reinstatement
jg |0f deductions when they prove to PENALIZED BY OPA the OPA that their inventories are . . . out of balance through either acelPeaities were By ¥he Indie Sem} upons was 0 oF Jecieentel distri minis co! % 4 WN A Sole Dilte ad th "| Another “second chance” amend3 against se stations | nent for legitimate dealers was It enables dealers to Sept. 1 and Nov. 15, it was an-|obtain reimbursemént where they | : * {have “been penalized for receiving | § | The violations involved the illegal |invalid or counterfieit. coupons “in gallons . of | spite of all reasonable precautions,” . within certain limits,
Fo
War Honors
| WW ood arises
Feel fectly free to call Peace wl er, hour of the day or night. The facilities of our funeral home are dedicated to people in every walk of life, and the consolation of a service by Harey W, Moore is assured all who call us when need arises.
AARRY-WLTTL00RE
2050 € INCHICAN ST. = cacaay soe
Pepsi-Cola Company, Long Island City, N. Y. Franchised Bottlert Pepsi-Cola Bottling Co. of Indianapolis iste Senator Ellison D. (Cotton Ed)
THREE EMPLOYEES of the Indianapolis Curtiss-Wright pro pellet plant have received national recognition for proposals which increased and improved war production. ‘Winners in the plant's monthly suggestions’ contest who received certificates from Washe ington are (left to right) Eugene Keeney, 818 Lawrence ave., Miss Ella S. DuPree, 2001 N. Pennsylvania st, and Reuben Windisch, 2056 Sangster ave, Miss DuPree is the first woman in any of the Curtiss propeller division's four plants to take first prize in a suggestion contest. She ppoposed a chatige.- in the manufacture of adapter plates for propellers, Mr. Keeney devised a safety shield for hub grinders and Mr. Windisch proposed ‘a new method for cutting metal test buttons for heat treat‘ing. .
PLAN REJECTED, UNION DECLARES
Says Rubber Plant Refused To Allow Study of Disputed Work. A proposal by the union that a WPB time study man be allowed
to examine the job operation in dispute in a labor controversy at -the
+ | United States Rubber Co. here was| 3
| said to have been rejected this | morning. . | William BE. Abel, president of local 1110, - United Rubber Workers of | America (0. I. 0), asserted that
[A. T. Daniels, Chicago, technical |i [consultant of the WPB, was denied |}
| permission to make a study, . - It was learned that a similar service offered by the United "States conciliation service, represented here by John D, Warren, was being
ternative proposal. No ‘such technical consultant was available here, however, and it would be neoessary to bring someone in from outside of town, John Cady, plant manager, had no comment to make on the cessation of work which the union has claimed is not a strike, but a walkout occasioned by sympathetic workers. It was emphasised by Mr. Abel that the union did not call a strike, that the 2000 employees left their work because “this Is not the first case in which the company has failed to discuss with us matters involving wages.” It was believed that the entire affair developed last Friday when the crews of two crude-rubber mix-
TWO MEN KILLED IN LOCAL BLAZE
Two men suffocated early yester_'day when fire swept the rooming house at 948 W. 25th st., where they slept. Fifteen other persons in the building escaped unhurt, The bodies were identified as those of Brady Parnell, 65, and Henry Stanberry, 21, both of whom apparently had been overcome by smoke in their sleep. The building, once used as # garage, recently had been converted into a large rooming house It is owned by Thomas Coger. Origin of the fire was not determined and no estimate of the damage was made.
-
HALL BECOMES SENATOR
| WASHINGTON, Nov, 27 (U. P.). |—Wilton E. Hall, Anderson, 8. C. | newspaper publisher, today became a U. 8 senator to serve until Jan. 3. Hall, a Democrat, was appointed to fill the unexpired term of the
En ——
J got the house too hot by careless firing of the furnace, #0 he’s trying to heat all outdoors by opening the windows. Through wasteful practices, he isn’t being fair to his own family — or » to other families using ¢oal. He isn’t
This winter it's vital to conserve coal as never before. This isn’t because less coal is being produced. Actually, millions more tons are being mined this year than last—by fewer men. Quite a tribute to . mine owners and miners alike!
mi . There are adequate facilities for hauk
© ing coal to your city. But certain grades and sizes of coal are needed for war pro-
1 coal dealer is handicapped by a shortage of manpower, trucks and tires. So be ~~ down to your last shovelful. li
+3
Ah
Warm but not fair!
. One of the biggest jobs of the C&0
duction. And, in addition, your local - Chesapeake & Ohio Lines
_ CHESAPEAKE AND 0Bi0 riLway
. # % La % ! dvs i NX 2 i w, ; | vg it K, 0 : be oh Er Lov mm (lig 2 oR : Se £700 i ; vo AT
And conserve the coal he is able to deliver to you through firing carefully, closing off unused rooms, pulling down shades at night and through other simple precautions. For other suggestions see your coal dealer. :
Lines is hauling coal from the mines along its routes, so we're in a position to understand the problem, and to know how essential coal is these days,
/ yy /
; NICKEL PLATE ROAD ° js MARQUETTE RAILWAY ; J ! 2 a
; ure 2 level tablespoons of coffee for
FE i Eg
ing machines were reduced by one man each.
Another Man Added
The union contended that the mixing operation originally had been given a time study that indicated it was a three-man jbb, However, about eight months ago, union leaders asserted, the company added a fourth man to each crew in an effort to circumvent a wage stabilization order that prohibited raising wages arbitrarily. It was claimed by Mr. Abel that the job was one in which there had been considerable turnover because of its undesirability. He said the company raised wages eight months ago by assigning a fourth worker and charging his wages to overhead, thus giving the other three men the benefit of four-man production earnings, Since the union considers a job as permanent after a worker has been employed on it more than 30 days, Mr. Abel claimed that removal of the fourth’ man should have been negotiated between company and union,
4 HURT IN LOCAL TRAFFIC ACCIDENTS
seriously, in week-end traffic acecidents here. Mrs. Ollie McCoy, 50, of 3015 Taft st, Mars Hill, received a broken right arm and internal injuries early today when she walked against the side of a car driven by Erwin Darnell, 4080 E. 16th st., at Tibbs
Just stepped off a bus.
was described as serious. Andrew Tidd, 65, of 350 8. Hamil ton ave, received a broken left leg yetserday when he was struck by a car driven by Ralph Neal, 34, of 443 8. Dearborn st., at State and Southeastern aves. Mrs. Josephine Allio, 28, of 5241 Cornelius ave., wife’ of James Allio, circulation manager of The Times, was badly injured yesterday when the car she was driving skidded in the streetcar tracks and crashed into a pole in the 3 block, College ave. Her 3-year-old daughter, Linda Allio, was not injured, but another pasenger, Peggy Smtih, 8, of Southport, received head injuries. Mrs. Allio suffered from severe head injuries and shock.
——— L. E. BOWSER DIES FT, WAYNE, Ind., Nov. 27 (U.P). ~Rites will be conducted tomorrow for Lafayette E. Bowser, 87, former plant superintendent of Bowser, Ine, who died yesterday after suffering from a stroke for three months,
Advertisement .
FOUR DON'TS IN MAKING COFFEE
Carelessness can result in disappointing flavor variation
suggested to plant ofMcials as an al- | ®
Four persons were injured, two ’
ave. and Miller st, where she had ff
Her condition at City hospital J
Hit and miss methods have no | place in the making of coffee. For consistently delicious flavor, cer tain rules must be observed.
THE INDJANAPOLIS TIMES
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