Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 5 October 1945 — Page 9
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so. EERE EER
Rk 1600 were idle in New Castle, Hag-
| —Gates of Northern Indiana Oil | refineries were open today, followI ing navy orders to resume produci tion, but no back-to F ment had developed.
:
| mitted that none had shown up. | union (C. I. O,) said they had rereceived no orders from either the § navy department nor their inter- ¥ it they came during the day.
| PUBLIC PRINTER SEES | BIGGER PAPER SUPPLY
. An optimistic report of the future] : Tepes of the printing in-
i reached in two years are wrong. B i Giegengack said “such forecasts|cChica | fail to take into account the in- °
I facturing and marketing leaders.”
| want for some time.
"situation included a walkout of ap- © proximately 1300 miners. - They quit {in conformity with strikes in:four i. other states as members of the
| Employes’ union sought recognition § AS members of the United Mine I Workers.
. threatened to spread among others { of 12,000 Hoosier miners.
that the Elkhart strike of 163 work- | ers in the Northern Indiana Brass
' tonight and that the workers would | return to their jobs next Monday. . The walkout began June 2.
i United Construction Workers walked | out in protest against what they F termed “persistent refusal of the i company to recognize our union.” | * Meanwhile, 1000 A. F. of 'L. and
i a jurisdictional strike at the Michi-.-gan City plant of the Pullman
| failure of federal labor agencies to : order an election for the purpose i of selecting - bargaining agents for i the employees. Decision to return I to work followed a National Labor | Relations Board | that an election date would be set
- which’ 1900 employees of four plants | of the Warner Gear Co. were in- : volved. The workers sought a 30 E per cent pay increase.
i Wednesday at the Buckyrus-Erie plant, Evansville; 1000 still were off
Castle; 315 still were idle. at La
LKHART STRIKE
"MAY END SOON|
: Kern Reports 7500 Out in
g Other Disputes. 4
: By UNITED PRESS Indiana
Labor = Commissioner
les W. Kern reported today that
-. state's oldest strike neared tlement at Elkhart, as more than 00 other Hoosier workers remained in other walkouts. est developments in the strike
Technical, Clerical and Supervisory
Observers sald the walkout Kern said it appeared probable
Company would end at midnight
Muncie Strike The strikers, members of the
C. 1 O.-U. A. W. workers planned to return to work Monday, ending
Standard Manufacturing Company. The walkout was blamed on
communication
y. At Muncie, a strike continued in
Elsewhere over the state, workers have heen idel
600 since
work in a long strike at the Mec-Quay-Norris plant at Connersville; erstown, Tipton and Richmond as the result of a perfect Circle company foundry walkout at New
Porte in the Bastian- -Morley company,
HAMMOND, Ind., Oct. 5 (U, P.).
-work move-~ Plant managers of the strikeEt bound companies posted working . schedules and hope dthey would F have -workers:to fill them, but ad-
Local leaders of the Oil Workers
| national officers, but called an eve- | ning meeting to act on the orders
PITTSBURGH, Oct. 5 (U, P)— - paper supply situation was given to y dusay of America, Inc., today by A. | E. Giegengack, public printer of the
. United States, who said that ., estimates of a normal supply being
L. genuity and ability of our manu-
He did say, however, that despite removal of war production board
{ controls on most papers on Oct. 15, a : we will not have ail the paper we
CT. 5, 1345
had taken an overdose of sleeping tablets.
limo, Michigan City, and his broth-
Additional Army Units Listed as Returning to U.S.
army divisions: 106th Infantry, 5th, 7th, 9th Armored: On high seas.
70th Infantry: In United Kingdom awaiting shipment at any time. 10th Armored: First elements shipped from Marseille yesterday; remainder to sail by Oct. 9. ~ 16th Armored: Arriving Le Havre staging area, to start shipping within few days. 8th Armored: At Camp Oklahoma City, scheduled to move to staging’ area soon. ; 36th, 66th, 75th, 79th, 89th Infantry, 12th Armored, 16th Corps: Alerted for movement.
4 DETOURS ADDED, SIX ARE REMOVED
Four new defburs were added and six were removed from roads closed for construction or repair throughout the state today, Also a bridge on U.S, 40, .2 mile, east of Dunreith, was completed and opened to traffic this week. Roads closed now are: IND, 2—From 49 to 6; detour 12'2 miles over 49 and 6. - IND. 9-In north part of LaGrange; detour 1'2 miles over city street and county oil mab. (Closed until Oct. 7.) IND, 10—From 55 ‘to Demotte; detour 7 miles over county gravel and 55. IND. 11-Bridge out 1 mile north of Elizabeth; . detour 2 miles over county gravel. IND, 11—From Seymour to Dudleytown; detour 16 miles over 50, 31 and 250, IND. 183—At south city limits Wabash; detour 1 mile over 15 and county.oil mat, IND. 16—Just west of Denver; detour 3 miles over county roads. U, 2 om New Haven to 52 miles northeast; detour 15 miles over 14 and 101. IND. rom 10 to 14; detour 22 miles over 10, 43 and 14. VU. 8. 50—From Dillsboro east 5 miles; detour 21 miles over 1 and 350. 58—From Bedford to 135; detour 33 miles over 37, 50 and 135. IND. 59—From Jasonville to Clay City; detour 15 miles over 48, 150 and 246. From Salem to Pekin; detour 13 miles over 135 and county roads. 60—From Mitchell to Salem; detour 29 mles over 7, 337 and 56, IN 66—Just west -of Leavenworth to 64; detour 37 miles over 62, 37 and 64. IND. 110—From 10 to 53; detour 5% miles over 10, county roads and 53,
10 miles over county road and over 5 45 a
IN 297—From 84 to 50; detour 32 miles | over Dee 61 and 57.
GRIEVING CLOWN'S
PARIS, Oct. § (U. P.).—Today's redeployment timetable of ‘U, S.
IND. 121—South of Connersville; detour | D. 162—From 62 to 64; detour 21 miles | nd 64.
LIFE ENDANGERED
Unhappiness comes to ever-smil-ing clowns, too. Today, Brownie, the circus clown, is In a critical condition at City | hospital just a week after the death | of his wife, Brdwnie, whose off-stage name is Frank Brown, and his wife, had made their home in a trailer at 46 N. West st. It was there he lived the past week grieving for his wife. And it was there he was found unconscious by his friends. According to police reports he
His daughter, Mrs. Charles Ing-
er, Gus Brown, Decatur, Iil, have been notified of Brownie’s condition.
OFFICIAL WEATHER
U. 8. Weather Bureau. (All Data in Central Standard Time) Oct. 5, 1945 5:45 | Sunset Precipitation 234 hrs. ending 7:30 a. m, 04 Total precipitation since Jan, a RE 45.20 | Excess since Jan. 1 coe +13.88 The following javie shows the temperature in other cities
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THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
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