Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 16 January 1946 — Page 5
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{MEAT WORKERS Indianapolis Needs a Bath— BAN PROTESTS "‘chimicaLty ‘waukeo| BEGIN WALKOUT| Streets Littered With Trash BY EUROPE BIS]. me v + mnie
Nation’s Strike-Idle Is . Saunton Savon from Across the Sey” from Mayor McN ey ; : on Boosted to 916,000. * | rug GarBaGE backlog in guage, soo Meru Cras Down
Demonstrations. ; square alleys is one thing. Ac- © (Continued From Page One) cumiplated surface grime and rub- (Continued From Page One) cent hourly pay increase in a crucial bish is another, . the comynittee wanted more details, meeting today at the White House. | Some mile square alieys look as and that Eisenhower had agreed THREE: Operations were sus-|-f they haven't been brushed or pended in 78 plants of General Elec-| Washed for years. Nobody com- 10. phear before We Qovp nex) tric, Westinghouse and General| Plains about ‘a dirty alley. But Tuesday. “We have to let the public know
Motors’ electrical division by a dirt’s dirt’ and the health hazard ; ’ : : « 5 a what is going on,” Mr, May suid, ‘OFA SOME RESIDENTS have tack- | ‘ang we want {0 see that congress AIR GEN. ‘WILLIAMS
strike of 200,000 C. I O. electrical| is the same. led the problem by burning their |is setisfied.” R
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workers Neither are housewives grumFOUR: The Ford Motor Co. Hg about bose qowe collec offered to raise wages 17% cents| tions hborhood districts ; : an hour, only 2 cents short of the| Oarbage and ash pickups are or Seeower promised that 19%-cent increase recommended for| scheduled once a week. In some 3 a Sey ‘sali wan With striking General Motors workers and| Areas, collection lapses have ex- 10 polnis of Yoke service vliier for which the union said it would| tended over weeks and months. home or on the way home. Job to Be Done And he told homesick G. 1's that further demonstrations would serve
- . » ONE WEST side housewife said her garbage and ash containers hadn't been emptied in no purpose because the army has six weeks, : the job of protecting American inAn East side housewife didn't But that's terests overseas and proposes to do it. Senator Edwin C. Johnson (D. Oolo.), chairman of the subcom-
see a pickup truck for two months . 8 =» until crews recently infiltrated Tomorrow: What the Sanitamittee, sald the group would enlarge its Investigation to inquire
hearings on labor legislation in re- | [sponse to growing demands for strike remedies. ‘iin Strike Begins at 12:01
into that district. . . | tion Chief Says,
or ren en wos Kimmel Tells Probe He Was i dustry’'s big four packers. . ‘ Not in on Army Defense Plan
Strike action was directed pri(Continued From Page One)
WASHINGTON, Jan. 18 (VU. P.)~Gen. Dwight D, Eisenhower estimates that the army will be down to 1500000 men by next July 1. It wold be made up as follows: Men drafted before V-E day but not eligible for Regular army enlist-
against the major ‘meat t, Armour, Wilson
and Cudshy—which supply 42 per
VETERANS
VIRUS
DETROIT, Jan. 16 (U. P.)—,
“I am sure such unification will increase the efficiency of national defense,” the famous airborne commander sald. “As taxpayers you should be interested in Gen. Somer vell's statement that elimination of
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cent of the total meat production. But several smaller, independent packers also were affected. Meat supplies, except for armed
. striking from entering the plant. Today's conference between C.I
The President expressed hope at that time that an agreement would be reached and reiterated his hopes for a settlement at a news con-
309 Roosevelt Bldg. RI-5I51
fd
ference late yesterday. Mr. Truman also told reporters
Fought Easy Way
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that he still hoped General Motors would accept a fact-finding board's recommendations of wage increases jof 19% cents an hour. The proposal {was accepted by representatives of (175,000 striking G. M. employees {but rejected by the auto firm. The 56-day G. M. strike would be settled now, the President added, if congress had given him the factfinding legislation he asked for.
«SUSPECT ARRESTE
proposals | sisting an officer.
vestigating commission he headed in 1042, - Adm. Kimmel testified that he had received an. official notice that
IN HOLDUP ATTEMPT
Robert Shriber, 22, of 1716 Broadway, was charged with violation of the 1935 firerams act, drawing a deadly weapon, vagrancy, and re-
Lt. Roy Reeves made the arrest after a North side cab pulled in front of the police car on Indiana ave. and the ver told the officer that Shriber attempted to hold him up. After a chase and a scuffie, Lt. Reeves took Shriber in custody. The cab driver, William Jeffries, 29, of 828 Kampe st. told police he had picked Shriber up at Massachusetts and College and that the passenger had pulled a gun and tried to hold him up. A second passenger in the cab was held on vagrancy charges. Mrs. Phoebe Clifford, 727 Union st., told police a masked ‘man who knocked at her door this morning and demanded that she “hand over
SHELBY COUNTIAN IS. NAMED CORN KING
, Ind, Jan. 16 (U.
the money” fled when she screamed for help. A purse containing $35 in cash was snatched from Jennie Quillen, 2213 Station st, as she stood in a downtown movie last night. A man grabbed the purse and ran out the
in the report of a Pearl Harbor in-
{an -upstairs bedroom of her home.
day with a charge that the navy department by withholding vital Information denied his Pacific fleet a fighting chance to avert the Dec. 7, 1941, disaster.
FELLOWSHIPS FOR CHURCH WORK VOTED
(Continued From Page One)
Indianapolis, as national director of young people’s work in the department of missionary organizations. Mrs. Joseph B. Hunter also of
al A ? Hunter succeeds Miss Jessie M. Trout of Indianapolis who resigned to become executive secretary of the department of missionary organizations. The Rev. J. D. Hunter was made director of adult work and Christian family life the society. He and Mrs. Hun are former missionaries to the Argentine. The Rev. T. N. Hill of Richmond, Ing, was named secretary-treasurer of the Disciples India mission. Dr. Robert M. Hopkins, . president of the United society, presided at the
BAD LUCK HOUNDS SANDERS FAMILY
Bad luck struck twice in rapid succession today and yesterday at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Charles E. Sanders, 1306 N. Oxford st. This morning fire of unknown origin practically destroyed the
called police that burglars had entered and ransacked the house, A table service for eight valued at $45 and two pair of silk hose were taken. But the bad luck runs deeper. Last Sept. 26 Mrs. Sanders was the victim of a brutal slugging in
The intruder took $50 at that time and tied her to the bedposts after gagging her. She was at St. Vin¥ cent’s hospital for several weeks be-
home. Late yesterday Mr. Sanders]
into the reasons selective service had failed to meet its draft quotas. He said Mr. Royall also will be asked about the army's day-to-day costs, the number of its civilian employees and its handling of sur-
must get 1,500,000 additional selectees and volunteers by July 1 to meet its demobilization goals. It also might have a bearing on whether the house military affairs committee will make any effort to the draft beyond its present
HEAVY FOG TIES UP | SAN FRANCISCO AREA
SAN FRANCISCO, Jan. 16 (U. P.).
Pacific ships, and slowed motor trafic from Sacramento to Fresno. The ferryboat Ernie Pyle crashed into a cargo Ship in the dense fog last night,
COLLABORATOR KILLED CANTON, Jan. 16 (U. P.).—Huang Mei-Li 25, convicted of collaborating with the Japanese, was executed by a Chinese firing squad yesterday,
fore recovering.
authorities announced today.
in every defense dollar.”
.| has approved for civilians who plan
competition and duplication in procurement will save at least 25 cents
Gen. Williams listed the merger legislation as “almost an emergency.” He called for .some sort of com military training declaring that one of the major needs of the country is a strong national defense program. The general, who directed the aerial phase of all the great airborne invasions in Europe, outlined the benefits which congress
to make the army their career. |
RULE IN RUSS ROW
(Continued From Page One)
keep controversial issues out of the first assembly's agenda. | The Iranian delegation will meet today on the The new instructions from Tehran superseded the speech o Taquizadeh yesterday in which he reserved the right to raise the issue if the big powers failed to solve the
AN BUCHANAN
(NEI LRL.
IRAN MAY ASK UNO 8
Soviet-Iranian problem at this session of the assembly. Taquizadeh said today that the directive from his government allowed the delegation here to choose whether to raise the matter before the assembly or otherwise, Only the possible persuasion of the big powers could prevent Iran from raising the question. {
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COLONIAL
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P.).~Gibson Gray, Shelby county theater, police were told. farmer, was named Indiana corn : king today and Kenneth Blackwell, Johnson county, won reserve sweepstakes honors. Mr. Gray, who lives near Fajrland, was the junior 4-H club corn king in 1926. His 10-ear sample of certified hybrid seed won him a grand sweepstakes ribbon at the snnual corn show, held in connection with the Purdue agricultural conference, The new king's sample won top honors in the hybrid seed class as well as sweepstakes on yellow corn. Mr. Blackwell, who won reserve honors, is a former state corn king. kidneys og | He lives near Franklin. His 10-ear entry was of single cross hybrid. Tully Anson, Huntington, won resérve honors in the certified Hybrid
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