Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 12 December 1945 — Page 3

BYRNES LEAVES FOR ~ MOSCOW ATOM TALK

TTT Tee i Vos

(Continued From Page One)

_ (Continued From Page Ome) sions that will affect the future

as possible would be brought up in Moscow, i The United States first proposed the conference at the five-nation

foreign ministers council in Lon-

don last September. It marked an attempt by Mr. Byrnes to compromise between Russian insistence that peace treaties with Balkan nations be discussed only by the Big Three, and the equally firm American and British determination that France and China also sit in, The London conference failed to reach an agreement, Plan lIscludes Other Nations Byrnes’ plan called for a general peace conference to write treaties with Italy, Romania, Bulgaria, Hungary and Finland. It would be attended not only by the Big Five but by all United Nations who supplied substantial military forces for ‘the war in Europe. After returning from London,

NEW DIVORCE CAUSE SALEM, Mass, Dec, 12 (U. B.).—

350 Children Ars Clothed:

TODAY'S DIRECT DONORS Donor Cited ployees : 3

arses arastaEnR TREE

Balance to Date...... $4187.93

Sears-Roebuck & Co. Goodfellowship Flower Fund . 100.00 Neighborhood T. O. B hb ............00..0.. t 25.00 ¥otin R. & 1. B. MiMurvay 25.00 John Powell ... ....... pane. 25.00 Lt. Frank Clark ............ 25.00 Mechanical Accounting Department, Gross Income Tax Division ............ 19.00 11th District Départment of American Legion 15.00 Mrs. Ciara V. Everingham 10.00 Herschel, Sarab & Bernard Stroyman ............... 10.00 KMB ............... ees 10.00 NBW.&F.BW..,...... 1000 BHB ............... eres 10.00 In Memory of Bert ..... ee 10.00 Emelia Moeller ............ 5.00 Bros. ......... 000000 5.00

Women of the Moese .... 5.00 5.00 3.50

Young Married People’s Class of Brightwood Meth. odist Church 3.00

Side Turners ............ 2.00 PMS ....ooiviiiiinnnnnnn 2.00 Marion Ave. _.............. 2.00 Alpha Cha , Delta Phi Beta Sorority ............ 2.00 F. C.'L. Club, in memory of Dorothy Faris ........... 1.00 AFriend ............. reve 1.00 Chuckie & Tommie ........ 1.00 A Friend ............ verses 1.00 Greetings ........... sennie 1.00 Cash ...... ve “etsensess 1.00 A Friend ........... tensnes 1.00 Total today ..... vees:$ 368.50 Total to date ........ $4556.43

DOC SHERWOOD SAYS

HE'S NOT FOR WILLIS

"(Continued From Page One)

not for my renomination. I have been advised there is some opposition, but many have said that they are for me.”

LaFollette Interested A veteran of both world wars, “Doc” Sherwood recently retired as Indiana adjutant general to take an Amerfcanization position with

‘| national headquarters of the Amer-

icarr Legion in Indianapolis. Should Mr. - Jenner fun, . Rep, Charles M, LaFollette, Evansville, is almost certain to toss his hat into the ring for the Republican senatorial nomination. He may any way. His method will be to stump the state as an anti-state organization candidate and on a “ progressive” platform. At a dinner last week given for Mr. Jenner by the Hoosier Republican veterans, the state chairman made a bid for labor and Negro votes. This has been the field most

s| intensely cultivated by Mr. La Fol-|

Jia 1 he Agni distziet

(‘FACT

Biv More Adiny for Help| BOARD NAMED

Negotiations May Set Pattern for Auto Industry. (Continued From Page One)

dering a general strike in the nation's steel mills, C. I. O. President Philip Murray opened the way. for further negotiations when he told a press conference that the union's $2-a-day wage demand was “a ne“We will negotiate it,” Mr. Mur-

back-to-work appeal and scheduled a strike Jan. 14 in the nation's steel, aluminum and ore industries.

page would involve upwards of 700,000 workers in 27 states. The path was cleared for discussion of wages with Ford Monday when the union proposed to guarantee uninterrupted production of Ford-cars by penalizing members involved in unauthorized walkouts. The company had refused to discuss

5.00 the U. A. W.'s demand for a 30-per-

cent blanket pay boost until the urion agreed to some form of “company security.” ' Mentions ‘Concessions’ [Particularly significant was a U. A. W, statement that it was not entering wage conferences with Ford on a “30 per cent or else basis.” Richard T. Leonard, head of the union’s Ford division, said such concessions as paid vacations and pension plans might influence the union to lower its demand. The union's insistence on a 30-per-cent boost brought the systemwide walkout which has shut down 93 General Motors plants. General Motors cancelled its contract agreement with the U. A. W. last Monday, however, throwing the entire agreement into negotiation, so that conceivably a “deal” simi-

lar to that of Ford and the U. A]

W. might be worked out between G. M. and the union, Another conference ended yesterday with the disputants no closer together on the contrpversial wage question than when the strike was called, 22. days ago. Congress Considers Legislation Meanwhile, congress considered legislation to curb unions violating “no strike” contract clauses and listened to debate on President Truman's proposed machinery to handle labor disputes threatening the national economy. Secretary of Labor Lewis B. Schwellenbach warned today the nation was in “critical need” of President Truman's fact-finding labor - program. “The situation is one, in which the national interest clearly calls for legislative action,” he said. “The inability~of labor and management to rediscover the instrumentalities

Schwellenbach testified before the senate education and labor committee in favor of legislation embodying Mr. Truman's proposals. Green Opposes Program approval, President William Green of the American Federation of Labor went before the house labor

- committee to restate his vigorous

x

They're ALL-WOOL — Plain or

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= from a fine

Eastern source — reputed as a. maker of superior Sweaters. is,

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BLU DE have

have béen reappointed by Prosecutor Sherwood ‘ Blue.

jobjections to Mr. Truman's pro-

granny _Pro-labor forces won. dan initial

victory in the house yesterday when the chamber voted 200-182 to postpone floor discussion of a bill to withdraw collective bargaining privileges from a union striking in vio-] lation of a contract. Under the measure, a union-also could be sued for strike damages by an employer.

In other labor developments, Sid-

ney Hillman, president of the C. 1 O. Amalgamated Clothing Workers

Union, announced the signing of a

REAPPOINTS TY PROSECUTORS

Two. former deputy prosecutors returned from service and

Gen. Patton Fails to Improve, MI

Condition Regarded : as Grave

(Continued From Page One)

pligtion 24 General condition remains good.” : Gen. Patton's wife reached “his bedside in the American army hospital here yesterday after a hazardous flight from the United States, After seeing him, she said, “Well, I have seen Georgie in these scrapes before and he always came out of it all right.” The morning bulletin showed a 10-beat drop in the general's pulse from yesterday's figure of 70. It also showed that his respiration dropped at times during the night to 16, from yesterday's steady fig-

. lure of 22,

(New York medical authorities said the drop in pulse was not sig-| nificant. They sho the drop in respira

concern.) Foenrday's Inte bulletin had:repuricd 3 slight \HpIOVARENS 18 She paralysis condition resulting from

the fracture of the general's third cervical (neck) vertabra and dislocation of the fourth cervical. This improvement did not continue. Patton was injured shortly before noon Sunday, when his car collided with a U. 8. army truck outside Mannheim. ‘He is being attended by a corps of leading neurosurgeons and army doctors sume moned from the United States, headquarters.

had | Britain and European

HANG FOR YANK KILLINGS KWAJALEIN, Marshall Islands, Dec. 11 (U, P.).—8ix Japanese army and navy officers were condemned

_goncern at| to death by, hanging today for the , stating that | decapitation of five American fliers

any figure below 20 was cause fori on Mille atoll in February, 1944.

-

STRAUSS SAYS:

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Merger on ‘Broad Basis’ Stating that the navy is not opposed to unification of the armed forces “on a broad basis,” Adm.

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