Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 22 October 1945 — Page 4
Cranston Vetaty are:
‘Campbell; Pfe. Kenneth|{13-——a rate of 1000 a day.
" aboard the Haseisowa Victory are:
2
at Boston are:
forces purged 30,000 Those arriving today aboard the many between Sept.
ar Hi Ng P eorge Warren Pfc.
Seven men scheduled to arrive
Sgt. | idly as possible.
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30,000 NAZIS LOSE KEY JOBS IN MONTH navy also is tn chaige of the Mid-
FRANKFURT, Germany, Oct. 22| West refineries, whi (U. P). —- American occupation
'®| These figures were announced of labor, Price Adrhinistrator Ches~ -5| yesterday by high military govern-|ter Bowles, and Eonomic Stabilizaand T-4 Charles J, SR Ay ‘s31 w. iment quarters as proof that Gen.|tion Director John C. Collet. Dwight D. Eisenhower's: orders for de-Nazification of the American zone were being carried out as rap-
Ale). Waiter 1. Stout; 3d Lt, Joseph| Since last May, 100,782 Nazis have|participate in the labor-manage~ Fred H Alexan G. Giassing ahd ipeen removed from key govern-iment conference at the White Those Cg were listed as arriving/meént and industrial positions.
we] LAU DRY? DRY CLEANING
PRUTiey ied 8.5, ons Stacy Named
T-5 Wil H, Wilkey; 1. Willa
1 Koonts; 1st Lt. Joseph Krebsbach; Pfc. ’ ‘ Horace Diékerson: Cpl. Donald 8. Peter } Pfe, Gregor W. King, J Guilford, and : Sgt. Wilmeth B. Harn
Seventeen local men are listed by the New York port of embarkation as due to arrive in the country ‘today and Thursday, and seven are Jisted as having arrived yesterday in Boston. All men will be propessed at Camp Atterbury.
(Continued From Page One)
recently were taken over by the government. Secretary of
C. Moran, second assistant secretary
Frequently Mediator Ayres sald Mr, Truman would see many of the persons who will
House during the next two weeks. He added, however, that a list of the participants and the agenda were not yet ready for publication although invitations have gone out. Judge Stacy, who has been on the North Carolina supreme court since 1926, has served frequently as a mediator in labor disputes since the administration of the late President Calvin Coolidge. He was appointed by the late President Roosevelt In 1941 as an alternate member of the national defense mediation board. He served subsequently as an associate member of the national war labor board and the national railway labor panel. Mr, Truman's wage price policy may come later this week. Policy Awaited The statement was awaited with equal anxiety by labor and indusfry. Labor seeks assurance that the government will back its de~ mands for higher wages to compensate for loss of wartime over-
State Deaths
~ BRAZIL—Mrs, Jesse Lee Lambert, Sur.
CHESTERTON-—Andre Lamport, 74. Sur vivors: Wife, dalene; sons, Bert, Fred Andre Jr.; daughters, Mrs, Lilly Isaacson, Mrs. Dorothy Olawe, Virginia; sisters, Anna Greenwalt, Ella Shepard, GOLDSMITH—Mrs. Nannie Bell Barr, 17. Burvivors: Daughter, Mrs. Charles W Tudor; aon, Lt. Jolly J.; brother, J. O. Pearcy. HUNTING G TON LnATIoS Potrucelle, 174. Burvivors: Wife, Mary A.; sons, Louls, Joseph, John; dauaniers Mrs. Rose Vohs, Mrs. Loren Nye Jr,, Mrs. Joseph DiBlasio; brother, Alexander.
Others called to the conference Nazis from were Secretary of Agriculture Clin. government and Industry in Ger-/ton P. Anderson, 15 and Oct.| Treasury Pred M. Vinson, Edward
vivors: Husband, Will; son, David H, o
by Truman as
Labor Conference Chairman
Justice Walter P. Stacy
time. Industry wants guarantees of price Increases to absorb any such higher production costs. One of Mr. Truman's most pressing jobs is to designate a method or agency for resolving labor-in-dustry differences without strikes or inflation during the critical reconversion period. The war labor board, which performed this task during the war, has sidestepped the assignment because it's going out of business by Jan. 1, The problem is of great urgency, especially in the automobile industry. Strike votes are scheduled this week in General Motors and Chrysler Corp. plants, The United Automobile Workers (C. I. 0.) wants a 30 per cent boost in basic wages to offset loss of takehome pay, but the companies in sist higher prices will be neces-
THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
LA FOLLETTE IN Rites: Arranged ROW AT \T HEARING|
Attacks Professor as Critic Of Jobs Measure.
: Times Washington Bureau WASHINGTON, Oct. 22~~Rep. Charles M. LaFollette, Evansville Republican, went into a verbal sparring match with Dr. Walter E.
committee meeting on the full-em-~ bill Ploymen I is head of the economics department at New York university. He said he was appearing against the bill on behalf of 31 chambers of eommerce. Under cross-examination he cut that down to 24. Mr. LaPollette, who is a member of the house committee on executive expenditures which is holding hearings on the bill, stepped into the cross-examination aftér Dr, Spahr had admitted that he thought that the “government should protect the weak against the strong” and approved of the various social security measures now in effect, Mr. LaFolette produced a dodger from the Committee for Constitutional Government, Inc. Just Statistician
It had been written by Dr. Willford I. King, who listed himself as an economics professor at New York university, Title of the article was “Where Does the C. I. O. Program Lead?” Dr. King's conclusion was that it leads to socialism. In one section he stated that thére would be no unemployment if workers
without regard to union wage scales. Dr. Spahr then labeled Dr. King “just a statistician in my department” and refused to accept responsibility for such statements,
Spahr end nearly broke up the|
For Patternmaker
SERVICES for George C. Hauser, 3381 Carson ave. will be held at the G. H. Herrmann funeral home at 1:30 p. m., tomorrow, The Rev. E. A. Plepenbrok, St. John’s Evangel= pre ical and Re- oo formed church, will officiate. Burial will be at Washington Park cemetery. Mr. Hauser, who was 55, ? died Saturday. An employee of the Sonith Pattern Works, : he was a life. George Hauser long resident of Marion county and had lived for 40 years in Perry township. Mr. Hauser was a member of the Patternmaker’s league, 5514, and the Southport Masonic lodge 207. : Survivors are his wife, Mrs. Ida Brier Hauser; a daughter, Mrs. Mildred Roberts; a son, Raymond Hauser; three sisters, Mrs. Dora Schellenberg, Mrs, Sophie Borgman and Mrs. Bare bara Roeckle; three brothers, Fred Hauser and Edward Hauser of Indianapolis and Henry Hauser of Solvang, Cal.
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mies department of New York ‘university specializes in putting out propaganda for such conservative organizations as chambers of commerce and the Committee for Constitutional Government,” Mr, LaFollette commented. Dr. Spahr turned livid and sputtered a reply. Committee members began taking sides. Upshot was that the Evansville congressman comspromised by saying he didn’t mean to attack Dr, Spahr's “intellectual
“It seems to me that the econo-
honesty. vg
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KOKOMO-—Ira Smith, 47. Suryivors: Wife, Pearl; sons, 8. Sgt. Richard, Sgt. Robert, Vernon, Eddy; Saughiar, Delores; father, Willlam H. Smith LA PORTE--Mrs. Carrle Austin, 44, Survivors: Husband, Edward; Mr. and Mrs. Roy Wire; daughter, Mrs. Paul Kramer; sons, Clifford, Edward: brother, Guy Wire; sisters, Mrs. Maude Bohrader, Mrs. Josephine Ray, Mrs. Frances Bradford. MUNCIE—Charles Veneman, Sr. 67. Survivors: Wife, Pern; son, Charles Jr.; mother, Mrs, Mary Veneman; sister, Mrs, A, W. McCarty; brother, Frank. NEW SALEM-—Mrs, Harriett B. Cameron, 86, NORTH MANCHESTER--Oren E. Grandstaff, 84, Survivors: Daughter, Mrs. Alice ROSS; son, Oren Jr.; wife, Clara; brothers, Loyal, Chester, Walter, SEYMOUR~-Theodore CGroub, 86. Survivors: Wife, Louella; sons, John C. Thomas C. SHELBYVILLE—John Wesley Schmidt, 45, Burvivor: Daughter, Mrs, Jean Fisher; son, Richard Everett; father, George C Schmidt; sister, Mrs. Marguerite Newlin; brothers, Harold and George E. WINCHESTER--Mrs. Harriet 8. Robi son, 61. Survivors: Husband, Dr. J, 8; daughter, Mrs. Helen Cassidy; sister, Mrs, Stella Johnston, brothers, Arthur snd Clyde Foster.
CONNERSVILLE LEADER DIES CONNERSVILLE, Oct. 22 (U.P.). ~Funeral services will be held Wednesday for Fred C. Neal, ‘for(mer school board member and businessman. Neal 78, died Satur-
day night. He was active in Republican circles and was a former election commissioner,
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