Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 21 January 1946 — Page 3

i

one Enables’

8y Plants,

an. 21 (U.P) 8 from all over: *d In New York.

report on their discoveries dure

» and to discuss’ of the coming’

delegates arrived

he five-day ses can Institute of - TS, covering 2° ims, conferences gs, which began

enden of Cleve of the institute Case School of resided over the

crophone Ay was a tiny, ; throat .micro2s it possible for each other withe 1 the noisiest

a” microphones, sed by air force war, are highly ions transmitted with the throat sitive to noises e alr, hroat” was dein testing these > throat has its n structure, and it almost has to

ing but swallow,® Tn,

(Continued From Page One)

| ganization of independent unions | was fought vigorously. Andrew Carnegie at first believed | In the right of men to form trade | unions. Ig 1889 a strike at the . Homestead, Pa, mill of the Carnegie company was won and a con- | tract was written keying wages to | steel prices. But in 1802 disagreement arose over scaling down wages and Henry C. Frick, then managing Carnegie properties, undertook to import 300 Pinkerton “watchmen” at Homestead. Resisted Arrival After the plant had been closed, it was arranged that the Pinkerton men should be moved up the Monongahela river' to Homestead by barge. Guns and ammunition were shipped separately, But, strikers met the Pinkertons on the morning of July 6 and undertook to resist their coming. When the bitter fighting was over seven strikers and three Pinkerton men had been killed and many others wounded, Troops were called out and soon importation of strikebreakers became effective. The strike dragged on a few months but eventually the

union was beaten and unionism.

was eliminated, for the time being, in most of the mills of the Pittsburgh district, The Carengie company proclaimed it would never again recognize a labor organization. y Amalgamated Defeated U. 8. Steel, shortly after its organization, adopted a resolution opposing any extension of union labor, advising subsidiary companies to do likewise. The Amalgamated Iron and Steel Workers, the union of that day, had a few contracts in subsidiary plants, but it was eliminated completely in a l4-month strike, marked by violence, in 1909. Thereafter the union was limited to a few small independents. Organized labor advanced generally in world war I, but made little progress in steel. In 1919, William 2Z. Foster, then of the A. PF. of L, and today Communist party leader, undertook a widespread organizing campaign, and 365,000 workers went out on strike in September. Because of Foster's known radicalism the strike was represented as “revolution.” Union Cause Lost Martial law was declared in various areas and 2 deaths were attributed to the conflict. The number on strike dwindled as weeks passed, by mid-December production had been restored to 50 to 60

MONDAY, JAN. a1, 1946

Steel Industry Center of Historic Union Struggles|

the union cause was lost. . _ The spectacular rise of unions under the National Industrial Re-

to steel, when John L, Lewis and Philip Murray of the C. I. O. found success where others before them flountiered. The American Iron and Steel Institute announced it would never recognize the independent union. The steel industry was rocked ‘in March, 1937, when the U. 8. Steel Corp. “ reversed its ancient stand and through its board chairman, Myron C. Taylor, recognized the union, ; Powerful Today But Little Steel balked and that summer began a long siege of armed warfare between union and management at plants of Bethlehem, Republic, Youngstown Sheet and Tube and other smaller steel companies. Ten strikers and strike sympathizers died in a riot at the Inland Steel" Co. plant at Chicago on Memorial ddy. Aqueducts were dynamited in Johnstown, Pa. The national guard was called out in several states, Tom Girdler and his Little Steel cohorts finally won as, under troop protection, the mills resumed again in many areas. It was rated the bloodiest conflict in U. 8. labor history. But out of that turbulent crganizing campaign of a decade ago grew the powerful steel union of today.

Rainbow Girls To Have Dance

THE ORDER OF THE RAINBOW for Girls will have an informal dance at 8:30 p. m. Sat-

urday in the Southport high school gymnasium. Sponsors of the affair will be the Southport Masonic and O. E. 8S. chapters. A floor show and program will

precede the Miss Kirk dance. Committee chairmen are Miriam Brewer, dance; Mary

Kay Stevenson, decorations; Car-

olyn Kirk, refreshments; Mary Ella Echols, tickets; Evedyn Sutherlin, entertainment, and

per cent of normal and by January

STRAUSS SAYS:

Marjorie Bennett, invitations.

"Rainbeau" is made of plastic-coated

It is strong, durable

It won't crack, peel or It's not merely water-repellent—

but has a lifetime waterproof finish.

at 9:30 A. M.

is in Strauss Woman's Shop . . . second floor . . . in royal blue,

RED! BLUE! GREEN! BLACK! Wo. NG It's the : "RAINBEAU" - Raincoat in Plastic-Coated and a grand coat to owr. DuPont Nylon . , . the fabric has been perfected and selected by the Army Quartermaster for tropical weather protection. and light. stain . Hear + "Rainbeau” “A Lady's Notebook” over WIBC green, red or black , . . every priced at 1 7.95 = Wednesday . and Priday

/ La! 2, INC

? The Specialty ‘sho Tailored Women,

i Floor

"ISTEEL STRIKE

covery Act in the mid-1930’s spread | .

IDLES 750,000

Biggest Tieup in U. S. History Closes 1200 Plants. (Continued From Page One)

Houston, Tex. half the 5000 em-~ ployees of Hughes Tool Co, mem bers: of an independent union, planned an attempt to breach the C. 1. O.'s picket line at 7 a. m. (Cen~ tral standard time). b Possibility of disruption. in gas and water supply at Gary, Ind., was threatened when union and company representatives disagreed over maintenance operations at Car-negie-Illinois Steel Corporation's huge plant. The union charged the company had failed .to supply a list. of personnel scheduled to operate facilities which supply the city’s heating gas and power for the water supply.

Plans ‘Protection In West Virginia, Brook County Sheriff Hoyt Allen said he would provide protection for employees of the Standard Slag Co. who said they wanted to work. The plant is near’ Weirton Steel's Weirton, W. Va., plant where "10,000 members of an independent union have resisted C. 1.0, organizational drives for nine years. Philip Murray, president of the C. 1. O. and the steel union, returned from Washington to direct activities from the union's international headquarters. Operating headquarters of U. 8S. Steel are just six blocks away. But no conferences were scheduled.

Picketing is old stuff to Alex Orr, 47, who estimates he has walked the equivalent of twice around the earth since starting picket duty at Peterson Auto Sales Agency, Chicage, three and a half years ago. Picketing started in 1939 over closed shop demanded by Aute Mechanics’ Union of AFL. Orr is third picket assigned to the job.

THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES -

| cago,

STRIKE CLOSES 10 PLANTS HERE

Steel Workers Join National ‘Walkout at 12:01 A. M. (Continued From Page One) mostly in Indiana, exceed

77,000. Other cities besides Indianapolis affected, included Terre Haute, Ft. Wayne, Miincie, Greensburg, Crawfordsville and Kokomo. Picket lines were formed around local plants at 12:01 a. m. today and Mr, Robb said the picketing would be maintained on a 24-hour basis. Union officials last week assured Mayor Tyndall that picketing here would be orderly and that pickét-carried banners would deal only with the $2-a-day pay hike sought over the country. Gas Crisis at Gary ; Approximately 3300 of the strikers were employees of the 'Link-Belt Copmany’s two local plants who have ben ‘on strike for a week. First crisis of the new strike was reported at Gary, where the city’s 150,000 residents faced drastic curtailment of gas service as an outgrowth of the strike at the Carnegie-Illinois Steel Corp. plant, the gas supplier, Members of the Foremen's Association of America, an independent union, voted early today not to maintain fires in the plant after 6 p. m. because of a disagreement between management and the C, I. O.

Mr. Murray is scheduled to make a nation-wide radio speech at 10:30 o'clock tonight over the American Broadcasting Co. network, explaining the steel workers side of the wage dispute. Pickets Rap Fairless

The parading steel pickets cars ried placards which read: “We'll picket till we lick it.” Referring to U. S. Steel President Benjamin F, Fairless, another sign declared: “We want a fair deal, not a Fairless deal.” And throughout the rest of the country pickets ringed the plants of General Motors, the “big three” of the electrical industry and the major meat packers. A. high government official said seizure appeared the only course for ending the six-day meat strike and replenishing supplies, already down to 25 per cent of normal. He said no date had been fixed but that it might come tomorrow or Wednesday. “Parley Fails

The strike of farm equipment workers became a certainty after Harvester and union officials adjourned a seven-hour meeting at 1 a. m. today no nearer agreement on union demands for a 30 per cent wage increase. A government fact-finding board. began hearings! in the dispute yesterday. Meanwhile, C. I. O. Auto Workers| gave General Motors until midnight tonigh to agree to a 19% cent hourly increase recommended by a similar fact-finding panel. Otherwise, they said they would revert to their original 30 per cent demand. As the number of strikes reached

2 DIE AS SNOW

Tonight.

(Continued From Page One)

license.

were hurt.

of 2401 Olney st., his wife,

840 Lawrence ave.

Earl Daugherty, the driver,

condition at City hospital. Van Meter, 17,

st, passengers, were

| Methodist hospital.

TRUMAN MESSAGE

(Continued From Page One)’

an all-time high, congress prepared to act on top-priority labor bills and other reconversion measures. The house labor committee votes tomorrow on President Truman's request for fact-finding machinery to prevent strikes, Chairmen Andrew J. May (D. Ky.), of the house military affairs conimittee, said the “sentiment of the nation is getting much stronger” for action. He warned that his committee would start work“ on labor bills if the labor committee failed to act.-

Reveal Rommel

Died of Poison

(Continued From Page One)

bile between Nazi Generals Bergdorff and Meisel. Keitel, who believed the plot charges against Rommel were true, said, “The fuehrer called me into his office and told me ‘Rommel was involved in the July 20 plot,” the document disclosed. “The fuehrer read me a statement that Rommel was reported to have made: “Tell them in Berlin (the bomb plotters) that they can count on me.’ "”

~ » »

little progress on any of the Pres|ident’s bills although the house la- | bor committee may report early this | week a curtailed version of his fact-

finding proposal.

administration's practices bill.

fair

and the people his over-all domés-

Long in the Red

tween congress

nominal leader of his party.

wartime objectives. Mr. Truman recognizes economy and real progress toward a balanced hydget as two essentials of stable’ government, Beginning in 1930—mid-term of the Hoosier administration—the world’s richest nation has been in the red. Mr. Truman is believed to be determined to present to the people a

HITLER then ordered Keitel “to take care of Rommel.” Keitel telephoned Rommel at his home near Ulm and made a formal appointment for the arrest when Rommel said he could not come to Berlin because he was not fully recovered from his inJuries. Rommmel’s body was taken to a hospital and his wife was notified he died en route.

ENDS 30 YEARS AS TELEPHONE WORKER

A gold emblem, significant of 30 years service with the Indiana Bell Telephone Co., has been presented | to John D. Bishop, pia 1354 N. Tuxedo st. & Mr. Bishop is dis- § trict wire chief of the company after a career that be- 8 gan 30 years ago % as a messenger. i E K. Gossiygeneral plant manager, made the award. Mr. Bishop is a member of the John D. Bishop |

3 Telephone Pioneers of America.

htt 4 chs ian see:

IR AN SPLIT INDICATED

LONDON, Jan: Moscow reported

J has decided to establish direct trade relations with foreign countries in-

ernmeng._.of- fan. PE y > wo J;

21 (U. P.).—Radio | today that. the autonornous Azerbaijan’ government land set a watch around his father’s |

balanced budget program before November, 1048, when we next elect

a President, |

STUDENT SOUGHT

COVERS ROADS

Colder - Weather Forecast But the union charged last night

ing -under the influence of alcohol and failure to display a driver's

When a Beech Grove bus collided with an automobile at Pennsylvania and South sts. early this morning, the car driver and two passengers They are John Sanders Mrs. Ileen Sanders. and John Lewis of

The driver and two passengers were hurt early today when a cab plowed through a safety zone in the 400 block of E. Washington st. was ‘tharged with drunken operating and reckless driving and is in fair Louise and Henry Van Meter, 13, both of 20 N. LaSalle taken to

STRESSES CRISES

The senate is paralyzed by filibuster of southerners against the employment “That bill would make it a federal offense to discriminate because of race or religion in giv{ing employment, With his combined message /the President will lay before congrss |

tic, foreign and financial program. |

From that point onward there will be a contest for dominance beand the White

House to determine whether Mr. Truman is the real or only the

The administration already has cut-back expenditures sharply from

Steel Workers union. The steelworkers union and the

agreed ldst week to keep .maintenance men in the plant to continue supplying Gary's gas for heating an cooking, and electric power for |its water supply.

Will Use Emergency Unit

hat the company had failed to provide lists of accredited personnel and working schedules, thus violating the agreement: Mayor Joseph Finerty said that “almost all” of the city’s gas is fur-

nished by the Carnegie-Illinois plant, the biggest steel mill in the world, through its coking bperations. Mr. Finerty said that an .emergency electric plant could be used to provide powe rfor the water system, however. Fred -L. Williams, director of the Indiana region of F. A. A, said an order had been issued to all the union's members in the Calumet area to cease tending Carnegie-Illi-nois.furnaces after the C. I. O. requested such action. %

RIGHTISTS LEAD IN GERMAN VOTE. TEST

FRANKFURT, Jan. 21 (U. P).— {The first complete county return from Sunday's free elections — the first in Germany since 1933 — gave the Rightist Christian Democrats 112 out of 156 local council seats. Balloting was unexpectedly heavy. The eletions were held by nonNazi voters in 17 of 38 Hessian Kreis—ounties—for township councilmen in communities up to 5000 populations. Voters in other townships outside Berlin will hold similar elections throughout the American zone next Sunday. The county reporting was in the Catholic Rhine area wehre leftist Social Democrats had been expected to dominate. Incomplete returns from other areas showed strength by non- | partisan candidates, indicating elec- | tions were being decided on a per- | sonality. rather than a party line basis.

BOMB KILLS CHILDREN EADA-MURA, Japan, Jan. 21 (U, P.).—Five primary school children were killed and seven others injured when an incendiary bomb they found on a nearby beach exploded, it was announced today.

REPORT ON JAPAN

|Lines Drawn for fi) Long Steel Strike, o

. union, which got a toehold after

Carnegie-Illinois management)

| Salvation Army,

LOS ANGELES, Jan. 21 (U. P). —The American reparations mission leaves today for Washington to make an official report to President Truman on its finding during

* (Confinued From Page One)

3 or 4 cents in their hourly pay is a matter of supreme importance. To them it is a question of whether their union ‘or their employers come out on top, ~ . «8 PHILIP MURRAY, head of the steel union and of the C. I. O, declares. the conflict involves more than wages—that the steel industry is trying to “break” the

long efforts toward recognition as the agent in collective bargain

Mr. Murray sees industries other than shee} in His effort.

THE OUTCOME al decide for many years the respective positions on wage matters of labor unions and management. If the union can win this fight, through public opinions supporting President Truman on what he said was a reasonable basis of settlement, the pattern will be set for other wage strikes now holding up reconversion and production leading toward national prosperity,

”. . LJ BUT ALL the indications here are that the steel strike may go on for many days, perhaps even as many as the 60 days just turned in by the C. I. O. United Automo-. bile Workers’ strike against General Motors Corp, in Detroit. The steel strike, if it lasts many days, will have an effect on the automobile strike. Steel is an important part of automobiles, and if no steel is being produced the competitors of - General Motors will not be able to compete. ~ LJ . \ THIS HAS produced queries to steel union ‘executives on their strike strategy. They deny any conflict between the motor and steel strikes.’ Each day of the steel “strike, according to W. L. Russell, business editor of the Pittsburgh Press, a Scripps-Howard newspaper, cuts off in the Pittsburgh district alone enough basic steel production for 45.248 automobiles or 760,230 kitchen ranges. For the national impact multiply that by four—in the potential output of articles that depend on steel, - » . MR. MURRAY is taking his post in Pittsburgh national strike headquarters, and U. 8S. Steel says that most of its operating officials will be here or in close touch. All of them on both sides are cool, calm and collected, and not unusually communicative. Which may mean a long steel strike, with national resilts hard to predict.

Whole Assembly Expe

N A |

To Approve Program.

(Continued From Page One)

{lication of reports detrimental to peace and security.” :

No Questions Asked

question or give any clarifications desired. But no one uel any questions, Just before the vote was called by Chairman Dmitri Manuilski of the Ukraine, the Polish delegate Zygmunt Modzelewski proposed that the three points of the Moscow resolution be made by the assembly into part of the law of the nations. The points were that atomic energy never would be used for destructive purposes but only for raising the standards of living, that the atomic bomb and other mass destruction - weapons be outlawed, and that effective safeguards be provided against violations. Mr. Manuilski suggested that. the Polish proposal be submitted to the commission once it was created. UNO officials meanwhile were considering how to handle Iran's complaint against Russia, which was submitted officially on Saturay. The security council probably will receive the protest at its next regular meeting.

‘Kiwanis to Hear

Television Talk

JOSEPH GERL, president of Sonera Radio & Television Corp., will discuss “The Effects of Television on Amer‘ican Industry” Wednesday at the Kiwanis club's luncheon in the Columbia club. Mr. Gerl, a veteran of many years in | the radio industry, has been a leader in the rapid develop- Joseph Gerl ment of television for both commercial and home use. In television Mr. Gerl forsees a ‘“revolutionary effect on business and in the social life of every citizen.”

SPEAKS AT RECEPTION

Technical high school,

COMMUNISTS AFTER FRENCH PRESIDENCY

(Continued From Page One)

manded by the left-wing parties, Fundamentally,

between De Gaulle and the lef¢wing organizations over efforts to reduce the post of president to a secondary role in the proposed new constitution for the Fourth Republic, The Communists and Socialists have agreed upon basic constitutional proposals setting up a onehouse legislative body with a prime minister closely responsible to it. De Gaulle wants a strong executive, free to deal directly with urgent situations. Might Turn to De Gaulle Bitter criticism of the government’s handling of the food crisis has caused tension within De Gaulle’s cabinet recently, with several personal quarrels. Last Monday he reportedly told the cabinet it must quit fighting if it was to remain in power. There was a pbskibility that the assembly might ask De Gaulle to form a new government, as it did successfully last November. 8 The last previous major crisis in the government's turbulent was on New Year's day. Three times that day De Gaulle threatened to resign over the issue of cutting military expenditures, but a latenight compromise delayed a real

70 days in Japan.

EVENTS TODAY

luncheon, 12:18 p m Washinglon. Indiana Grain and Feed Dealérs wakoetn tion, luncheon. noon, Columbia Club Indiana State Optical association, vention, 10 a. m. Severin Gideon SUAAY, meeting, 7:30 p. m., Wash-

con-

IN KIDNAP-SLAYING

|

CHICAGO, Jan. 21 (U, P.).—An| | intensive séarch was’ ordered today | |for Sidney Lester Sherman, 21-year-|old Northwestern university student,

nap-slayirig of Suzanne Degnan. Police Commissioner John Pren- | dergast told reporters that Sherman, |a former marine, had cast suspicion lon himself by his failure to appear rly before police. “Although he may not be involved, it is reasonable to assume {he knows he .is being sought,” | Prendergast said. “His eontinued {absence in the face of the publicity [he has received has made him a major suspect.” Prendergast disclosed that articles | lof the youth's clothing had been taken to Washington for analysis by federal bureau of investigation | technicians. A blood-stained handkerchief, with the marking “3168 S. Sherman,” also was submitted to the FBI laboratory. The handkerchief |was found attached to a wire noose near where parts '6f the six-year-old child's dismembered body were discovered two weeks ago today. Police have sealed the Hyde Park Y. M. C. A. hotel room of Sherman

Chicago - home. The youth has

been missing from his room,

for the past week.

~

wanted for questioning in the kid-|

Kis! dependently. of the central gov-|Northwestern .classes and his job a Mary Roberts,

ing lol Big on Railways, meeting, 10:30 a. m. Bayern,

Indiana Fire Prevention association, luncheon, 12:15 p. m., Washington. luncheon, 12:15 p. m,

Seley tech club, ypoo.

A Legion auxiliary, convention, 9

a. m., Antlers,

EVENTS TOMORROW

Indiana Grain and Feed Dealers associa-

tien, .luncheon, noon, Columbia club American Legion auxiliary, convention, 9

a. m., Antlers. Parent Teachers associajjon, Slane congress, luncheon, 12:1 p. , Claypool. *

Marion County Democratic Women's club, meeting, 8 p. m., Claypool.

MARRIAGE LICENSES

Milton Edward DeVoe Jr, U. 8. navy, Doris Elaine Crain, 3541 N. Meridian Richard John Reynolds, 26 E. 14th; Mary Louise Boner, Ball residence. Richard Earl Williams, 320 N. Wdérman, Patricia Ann Brackman, 1725 8. Meri-

dian Harold * Arthur Humpfirey. Wanamaker; Juanita Elizabeth Woehrie, Wanamaker. James Williams, 1929 Boulevard pl. Jean Evans, 2212 Martindale James Smith, 7501 E. Washington: Laura Jeanette Anderson, 1535 N. Delaware, Emerson W. Bridgewater, 1212' N. Senate; Ethel Rosetta Kennedy, 1039 W. 28th, Melford Herman Grimm, 3530 E. Vermont; Thelma R. Nelson, 726 N. Delaware, , 231413. Yandes; Georgia M. Ferguson, #49 W. 13th, Virgil Andrew Wilkerson, Greenwood; Lillie Marie Peavier, Greenwood. Edward M. Beasley 1445 E. 17th; Clemmie Seymour, 724 Blake, No. 125 Charles E. Spall, 1031 8. State: Elizabeth Antrim, 3538 8 Harding. Frank. Homer Wyles, Canton, O.; Ellen Hoss, Massilon, O Alvire. John Morlock, 1923 Hoyt; Ruby Barth, 3135 Hovey. njamin Frederick Pryor. Barnes Hoek; Grave Olive Padgett. 1014 8 Belle V | Leslie Albert Oraig. Fo, a Pauline

tha E. Robert Taal. tod? te Raymond; Stern, 1087 E. Raymond. ital 719 Massachusetts, ‘Massachusetts, :

Joan

Alice

Li

Mary |’

Ada)

showdown,

IN INDIANAPOLIS

Glenn Leroy Smucker, Ft. Benjamin Harrison: Helen M. Papp, Wadsworth, O william Herbert Durham, 830 S. Senate; Clara Ellen Goodman, 838 N. New Jersey JonN “Albert Wood Jr: = St.Louis ; Leola May Kayler, 4322 EB. Washington, Dilver Moreillon, Bennington, Eileen Les-

ter, 1119 Union. Leslie E 3 ler son, Salem; Iverna May Lee, Sale

AI . 2426 W. 16th; Mary E. Van Hook. 3205 W, Michigan. Jean Yves James Bharp, N. Girard, Pa; Utal Pauline Matheny, 1473 S, Belmont, Gene Wheeler Wilborn, 211 Kansas; Edna Margaret Skaggs, 145 Wisconsin, Herbert Jourdan, 4506 Evanston; Clara Madeline Nash, 4506 Evanston Richard B, ‘Woodard, 1130 Carter; Mabel L. Gilmer, 914 Muskingum Robert Lee Cassidy, West Newton, Rosa Mary Hap 1028 Newman. Legge, 18925 N. Talbott:

Edmund Banaras Lee Coming 1925 N.” Talbott Dawson Goodpaster, Marion, Lucille Doorne, 1220 N. Key Brune.

Donald Herman Merk 2161 8 Jersey, Alice Lillian Heitner, mm villa,

BIRTHS

Girls ¥ At St. Francis—James, Mary Smith.

At Coleman—Harry, Romaine Thompson; Lawrence, Rosemary Moore.

At Methodist—Merle, Leone Jones; Robert, | Thelma Tearce; Frank, Loulse Oliver.

vin, Idamae Soblosky

Boys At St. Francis — Herman, Rosemary Fisher; Noble, Helen Hickson; Vernon,

Mable Shafer.

At City—Charles, Jeanette Batkin; James, Garnett Sarver; John, Margaret Smith,

At Coleman—Theodore, Jean Locke. A$ Methodist—Vernon, Lea Cunningham;

Aubrey, Irma Walton, DEATHS

chronic myocarditis. . Methodist,

Sadie - V. Cook, 173, at pul. monary thrombosis. Howard D. Miner, 66, at St. Vincent's

gastric ulcer Desmond vias, 10 mo, at St. Vincent's, septicemia Rose Riley, 53, ‘at City, myocarditis. Fgh Wn 716, #b City, diabetes

Ob” abn, 16, a4 Cl, sores hems. rhage, -

cut in military expenditures de-

the resignation was based on a much deeper fight

their

life

religious educational director of th

church federation, at 7:45 p. m. tomorrow at the First Evangelical men sailed from Antwerp Jan.

chureh.

STRAUSS SAYS:

Strauss’

Corner,

At St, Vincent's—Lynn, Mary Davis, Mar- |

At St, Vinecent’'s—Joseph, Anna Sheppard

Frederick Wilkening, 69, at 537 B. 38th

for one

adi, wy . »

-~ o

Mr. Bevin pointed out the time} the nations had had to examine the] resolution. On behalf of the drafting powers he offered to answer any |

Hanson Anderson, principal of

will speak at a reception for Daniel R. Ehalt,

PRETTY: SOON

L STRAISS & C0, WE.

OF 60 NG

(Continued From Page One) =

guns was repulsed. Troops guarde ed the courthouse against a pose sible royalist attempt to destroy rece ords showing names of men whe collaborated with the Germans.

the adjoining cities of Kalamath and Sparta. Royalists were reports ed in control of all Kalamata exe

and police headquarters. - A force of 2000 royalists armed ‘with automatic weapons Was cofle centrated outside Kalamata, ah patches said.

14 U. S. Units ow Journey to U. S.

FRANKFURT, Jan. 21 (U, Pls= Today's redeployment time tables 80th and 84th infantry divisiatl, | 42d, 51st, 60th field hospitals, 94th and 196th general hospitals, 408th

fleld artillery group, aircraft automatic weapons bate tallon, 244th engineer combat bate talion, 602d anti-aircraft artillery battalion: On high seas. 100th infantry: Major portion oB high seas, last elements in Calais staging area of Marseilles zone awaiting shipment, 2d armored: In Oalais staging area. 94th infantry: 2d ‘and 3d bate talions of 301st.regiment on high

e¢ Le Havre area awaiting 682 casual officers and

116-11,

SY

Spa

COMES SPRING!

And the birds will twitter and trees will ‘bud—and bees will buzz—and there will be a buzz of conversation ~~ to the effect that :

new Store On the Come Spring—is about the

nicest, most companionable Man's Store—this side of the Atlantic and Pacific. (We mean the oceans—not

the grocery concern.)

In the meantime—Winter calls

thing or another

in wearables—and

The Boys' Shop has them.

prison by “X" men bearing tome

There was virtual civil war ia 3

cept an area surrounding the prison 3

seas, major portion of division im

¥