Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 4 October 1945 — Page 6

fontinued: From Page One)

Congress Acts fo Control ~~ A-Bomb on Truman's Plea

which . international collaboration and exchange of scientific informa-

ons of the world would Te- {tion might proceed.”

the atomic bomb mn war.

“The hope of civilisation,” he declared, “lies in international ar-

JHREE: Said he would begin |...coments Jooking, if possible, to

ediately international discus-

the renunciation of the use and de-

U.S. T0 SEI OIL REFINERIES

(Firms Reject Proposals for Compromise. (Continued From Page One)

EMPLOYERS TO HEAR DONALD RICHBERG

Donald R. - Richberg, expert in labor and management problems from New York and former head of NRA, has been invited by the Associated Employers of Indiana to address a dinner meeting Thursday, Oct. 11, at the Claypool hotel. Mr. Richberg will discuss the Ball-Burton-Hatch bill. He had

THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

la large part in drafting the bill

which is being urged upon congress as a means of preventing labor strife and promoting relationship in industry.

EXTEND RADIO TERMS _ WASHINGTON, Oct. 4 (U, P.).— The license terms of amateur radio stations and operators have been extended from three to five years by the Federal Communications Commission, ”

warning. :

SHOE RATIONING MAY BE ENDED BY NOY, 1

WASHINGTON, Oct. 4 (U. P). ~The government still hasn't decided when to end shoe rationing. When {it does it hopes to spring the news suddenly, without advance

ficlals in the war production board and the office of price administra tion—the two agencies which are trying to agree on the date for ending shoe rationing. They said the news of the date, when it is decided on, will be withheld until the night before the ration control actually goes off. “i All concerned felt it would be possible to make shoes ration free

THURSDAY, OCT. 4, 1945.

Earlier it had been expected that - shoe rationing would end by Oct. 15.

CHILD BURNED

Ardithann Mason, 2-yeareold daughter of Mrs. Lula Mason, 433 Warsaw st, was treated at City hospital last. night for bums re ceived when she set her clothing on fire playing with’matches., She was

within 60 days, possibly on Nov. 1,

sent home after treatment. 2

This was learned today from ofto seek “agreement on the velopment of the atomic bomb, and| . ; : gems ons under which co-opera- |directing and encouraging the use | Uidites, Taiizoacs, ships and city tof atomic energy and all future sci- | 3 jght replace rivalry in the 0 ® Dar mg . entific information toward peaceful New Districts Added of atomic power, and humanitarian ends.” Acting SFA administrator Abe Johnson Starts Bill The difficulties in working out Fortas added district 4, Ohio, and wislation ‘to create a specialisuch arrangements are great, -he district 7, in the southern West man commission was intro- said. But the alternative to over- | Virginia-Virginia “smokeless” coal! d in the <enate by Acting coming them “may be a desperate area, to a list of four districts | man Edwin C. Johnson (D, armament race Which wgll end in brought under the distribution pro- | ) of the military affairs com- disaster.” gram Tuesday. | It promptly ran into a President Asks Powers { Fortas said 115000 miners had left | tional snarl. | For the atomic energy commission their jobs in the dispute over| phnson, backed by Senate Demo- the President asked these powers: unionization of supervisory em- | s leader Alben Barkley, be-| ONE; Full supervision and con. |ployees, He

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estimated the pro-| Beved that the bill properly was in trol over all land, mineral deposits duction loss at 675,000 tons daily. ihe province of the military affairs and other materials which provide| Collapse of negotiations to settle amitte. Senator Arthur H. Van. sources of atomic energy. This pow- | the two-week-old ‘petroleum work Behberg (R. Mich.) objected vig- ler would extend to the atomic bomb | stoppage marked faiiure in the new-| usly. He sought instead to have plants, too, and they will be kept ly-organized labor department's \ measure referred to a joint operating, | initial attempt to mediate a major nittee of both houses, They| TWO: The authority to purchase labor dispute. ed to postpone the final de-|any real or personal property in or Labor Secretary Schwellenbach | until today. out of the United States. {sald he was “very much dis-| he President's message repre-| THREE: The right to issue li- fappointed” in the turn of events. | sd the composite recommenda-|censes for the use of commission | He admitted frankly that he did not of the ‘army, navy and state| facilities for research and explolta- know what steps would be taken to ment and the full cabinet. |tion, such licensing to be conducted end other strikes, idling 400,000 his message Mr. Truman em-|on a policy of widespread distribu- | workers throughout the country. od that the proposed inter-|tion of peacetime products on equit-| Bchwellenbach sald he had recom- | onal discussions would not con-|able terms to prevent monopoly. mended seizure only after it became 2 disclosure of the manufactur-| FOUR: The authority to establish apparent that the eight-day-old| Bg processes of the atomic bomb security regulations concerning the conciliation hearings were doomed : handling of all information, material to end in failure, and equipment under commission} The union had accepted the plan| jurisdiction. to resume production under a 40The commission mi waa intro- hour week and temporary 15 per | Quceq Be snap cent wage increase, pending arbl- | tary affairs committee, Shee tration of the wage issue, But |

Schwellenbach said the ofl com- | COTTINGHAM HAS * |panies, with the exveption of Sin- | A 25-YEAR HOBBY

clair Oil Co, had so qualified their| (Continued From Page One)

ther, he said, they will “constiie an effort to work out arrangeNts covering the terms Wunder

replies that “it was simply impos- | sible to have conducted an arbitration.” 3 Meanwhile, additional oil workers | walked out in Texas and Washing- | ton, D. C. k Striking Jongshoremen tied up New. York Shipping, and telephone | workérs went ahead with plans for | a four-Hour work stoppage tomor-| row to consider strike action. Tension mounted in the explosive automotive situation today following General Motors corporation's blunt refusal to accede to a union| wage demand. ‘Will Resist Power’ In a letter to C. I. O. United Auto Workers Vice President Walter P. Reuther, the nation's richest productrs of automobiles announced | flatly that “we shall resist ..the| monopolistic power of your union to force this increase in basic] wages,” Mr. and Mrs. ©. E. Day, Miss Ber- neral Motors President C. E. {nice Hussey, Miss Kathryn Graves, Ww n charged that the U, A. W's {Miss Rhoda Davies, Miss Ruth demiand for “excess wages” on the Lewis, Miss Florence Newhouse, Miss | 83s#mption that they could be paid Louise . McCormick, Miss Vera from past profits or from assumed | | Adamson, Mrs. Fred Adamson and | future excess profits was not sound. | | William A. Myers. “General Motors cannot and will : 8.» not use money saved up for years INCIDENTALLY, most of those|for the purpose of modernizing and | strange-sounding names belong to|expanding its plants, and for promushrooms that are edible. viding more good jobs, to pay ex-| Very few are poisonous, Mr. Cot-| cess ‘Wages for work not per-| tingham mentioned, But persons still should be care-

formed,” Wilson said, ful when eating any unknown foods.

The sternly-worded pronounce- | ment came during the first day of | STRIKE IN EVANSVILLE EVANSVILLE, Oct. 4 (U' P).—

negotiations on the union's demand for a 30 per cent blanket wage increase, the equivalent of al The Bucyrus-Erie plant remained {sixth day's work at time and a closed. today by a wage dispute in-| half, | volving the plant's 600 workers. The strikers, affliated with the A. F. of L, reportedly asked wage in-

to mt mh HUNT FOR SLAYER | PUSHED BY FIRM

(Continued From Page One) | since authorities agree that it Is] almost certain the slayer was either | an employee or ex-employee of the local branch. The route to the top of the complicated man lift, where Mr. Benner was attacked, is of such a complicated nature that familiarity with the surroundings would have been necessary, A knowledge of Mr, Benner’s schedule also was apparent in the crime, since he was struck at the point farthest away from aid and where he would not be missed until | the alarm office found he had not | turned his last box. | | Thus far, 40 present and past| | employees have been closely ques- | tioned and scores of others have { been investigated oy Detectives Jack | Small and Laurence McLaughlin, | assigned to the case. | Although major clews have been | scarce, detectives today sald the | field of suspects was “narrowing | down.”

SEEK BODY OF BOY "DROWNED IN CREEK

BLOOMINGTON, Oct. 4 (U, P.). -~Authorities today sought the body | of 3-year-old James William Coat! | ney, who drowned yesterday in| flood-swollen Salt creek, eight miles | east of Bloomington. Wher the hoy {fell from a bridge, 13-year-old | Grace Clendening jumped after him, The child was swept away in the current and the girl clung to a floating log and was rescued,

species because they have pores underneath instead of the gills, Only one specimen had Mr. Cottingham {gtumped. It was a shell-shaped Le in a lovely shade of deep rose. 1". To Identify this one specimen Mr, Cottingham will write to a friend at the University of Minnesota, a professor in mycology. By corre~ spondence the men exchange information and interesting anecdotes in their collecting.

» » ALTHOUGH the club usually {meets about once a month, their {meetings are more frequent now {because September and October are ithe best months for fungi. with a leck Members of the club are Mrs. of his hair Cottingham, Ralph Pierson, who is | president of the Nature Study elub,

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