Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 18 October 1946 — Page 1
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The 1
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1dianapolis Times a
FORECAST: Clearing and colder tonight with heavy frost. ‘Tomorrow partly cloudy and a little warmer.
2-
Aw
Fraternity house blankets are taking a beating at Butler university this week as 44 pledges to Utes,
sophomore organization, are striding about the campus .making like
Indians. Gathered im a pow-wow
are (left to right) Walter Dodd, Paris Crossing; Thomas Bemis and Jack Boston, both of Indianapolis;
William Osborn, Avon, and Mark Baldwin, Marion.
6.0, P. OFFICIAL
‘SPRINGS’ YOUTH Help Goering
Rhoads ‘Co-operates’ in
Release of Boy.
By KENNETH HUFFORD A 16-year-old youth today was indebted to his Republican precinct committeeman for “springing” him from the county jail. The accommodating’ committeeman is Morris (Mose) Denton, 4th precinct of the 17th ward, and a county health inspector. He received excellent co-opera-tion from Juvenile Judge Mark W. Rhoads, whom Mr. Denton telephonéd at 1 a. m. Tuesday, The judge immediately called the sheriff's office and ordered the youth's release, after he had spent
t two hours in jail. youth was picked up by poe late Monday, a few minutes
after they received. a Yeéport of a false fire alarm af Beecher and East sts. The youth was running, police
sy8aid, and they naturally suspected |
‘ him. A number of false alarms have been reported recently in this |
NUERNBERG, Oct. 18 (U. P.)
disclosed today. to leave it daily since Oct. 6.
had been understood heretofore to be limited to the prison. But today spokesmen for the 21 employees in cellblock C told correspondents that the restriction had been off since 10 days before the executions. Prisoner of War at First When they first came to Nuernberg, -the employees exchanged prisoner of war status for that of voluntary. but... confined contract laborers. Army officials attached no special significance to the coming and going, so far as could be learned immediately. But it admittedly opened up a new line of speculation on the contact with the outside world. Ribbentrop Had Vial Security officials revealed that the Nazi war criminals were collectors of potential suicide instruments | throughout the 10 months of their trial.
neighborhood. Arrested Before
In addition to offering . several] ° conflicting explanations to the .arresting officers, the youth admitted! he had reported false alarms previ-| owed that guards found everyously. His police record shows he! thing from paper clips to Tope. was arrested June 1, 1945, and taken |
| The official could give no exIo the benile aid division at police | planation as to where the prisoners
Ordered into juvenile court | obtained all the forbidden items.
on| this occasion, the youth confessed Find No Scratch U. 8. officials denied that Goer-
he twice had pulled fire alarm| boxes. He was found guilty and ing’s body bore any scratch or other ordered to pay $35 to the firemen's|sign that the poison capsule had pension fund. | been concealed under the skin of | The youth, who wears a mustache | his abdomen. and looks older than his years, was| Ine denials were entered by Ls. questioned closely by Michael J. Charles Roska, Nuernberg prison Hyland, fire prevention .director,|Physician, and Col. B. C. Andrus, and JAD police officers. prison commandant. Says Youth Innocent Col. Andrus admitted he had
{not made hor - This drew Mr. Denton’s ire. He a thorough personal ex
amination of Goering's bod protested that the youth was in-| However, both Lit. Rs ya Col. nocent and was being subjected to]
a “third degree.” {Andrus flatly denied reports which (h d f Sgt. Forrest Allison of the JAD, o Come irom & competent source clared that Mr’ Denton th last night that a small scratch had ned to get, oy job, ne - an n found on Goering’s abdomen. to have me reduced.” |The scratch was reported large
Mr. Denton denied that. but aa] TRoueh to conceal the tiny potassay that the police sergeant had "1 Syanige Sebsille. made disparaging remarks -about rrespondents were taken on a “politicians who interffre with af-| (Continued on Page 12—Column 5) | fairs of the police department.” Mr, Denton scoffed at the idea | that his efforts were prompted by! political considerations. He said] the boy was his “cousin” and his| interest purely personal. “Mr. Denton called me and said the boy was his sister's boy,” Judge Rhoads declared. “I released him as I would have released any other boy, under Similar @ircumstances.’ "|
A glass vial was found Jan. 31 in the cell-of Joachim von Ribben-| trop. A security officer did not say what it contained, if anything. A summary of ‘discoveries during the daily searches of
TRAIN STRIKES CAR AT ORLEANS, 4 DI
All Victims Believed Mem-
wri | bers of Same Family. BUS CRASHES FENCE. Times State Service 4 PERSONS INJURED MITCHELL, Ind, Oct. 18.—Four
| persons, believed to. be members of A Lexington ave. bus went out of
control today “and crashed through|® family, were killed instantly a fence iito a field near Woodlawn | this morning when their car was atid Keystone aves. slightly injur- Struck by a Monon passenger train ing four persons. near here. Ei be the bus, Ira P. Hay- Two of the victims were identified maker, 20, R. R. "4, Box 521, was|at & local mortuary as Hubert and
4
uninjured. Effie Terrell, The others, a man The four victims were Samuej|{?Pd a small girl, were not yet Barlowe, 35, of 3337 Prospect st.;|idenitfied.
The accident occurred at a/crossing 1% miles east of. Orleans in Orange county. The passenger car was completely ‘demolished. The crash occurred about 10:45°a. m. Monon Station Agent A. Moss of Orleans said the six-coach train 77 was a fast passenger en route from Louisville to Chicago. “They travel about 100 miles an hour ‘on the stretch of track where
Roscoe Hooten, 41, of 1030 N. Sheffield ave.; Elmer Kelly, 45, of 3502 E. Morris st., and Robert Chambers, 80, of 35 8. Catherwood st, All weré treated at City Bospiial and released.
TIMES INDEX
Amusements , 22|Inside Indpls. 19 the car was hit,” Moss said. Eddie Ash.... 30 Ruth Millett . 19 He said one of the men and the Aviation ....., 19 (Movies ...... 22 | child were decapitated by .the tm, BUS 5esvnnis 34 |Obituaries ... 9 pact. vier 26|F. C. Othman 191" mye train was not derailed, None | Classified . 32-34 Politics ar BA ao one Comics Berra 35i1Radio ....... 35 was injured. Crossword , 26 Reflections .. 20 Editorials .... 20 Mrs. Roosevelt 19 TAXATION PACT SIGNED Europe Today 20 {Scherrer ..... 20 ; ’ Fashions . 23 | Serial .3| PARIS, Oct. 18 (U. P)--An Fishing ..... 8 Silly Notions 19 agreement intended. to eliminate Forym ,..:.... 20 Sports 30-31 double taxation on. incomes of Meta Given . 23 Weather Map . 5| French or American citizens was 3 Wom. News 3-24 sighed age today.
In Indps. ...
A
in
the cell}
Did German Prison Workers
Obtain Poison?
~A channel of communication between Hermann Goering’s suicide cellblock and the outside world was
German employees of the prison said they had between permitted
German help around the cellblock in which Goering killed himself
|
6. 0, P. FAVORED IN MOST POLLS
‘Each . Party Says It Will Win Both-Houses.
By LYLE C. WILSON United Press Staff Correspondent WASHINGTON, Oct. 18. — Polls
and the reporfs of roving newspaper reporters forecast Republican congressional ‘gains “today as the general ‘election éampaign approached the final fortnight.
Republican partisans claim the house of representatives for sure. | They say they have a chance to win control of the senate. Democratic partisans insist they| | will maintain control of both houses of congress. The political alignment as of today is as follows: SENATE: 56 Democrats; 38 Republicans; 1 Progressive; 1 vacancy. HOUSE: 237 Democrats; 192 Re{publicans; 1 Progressive; 1 American Labor; 4 vacant. a Need 11 in Senate
The senate vacancy was created by the resignation of Warren R.| Austin, Vermont Republican. He {has been named United States representative to the United Nations. The Progressive seat was held by Senator Robert M. La Follette of Wisconsin, who sought nomination | this year as a. Republican. He was defeated in the primaries. A net gain of 11 seats would give the Republicans 49 and majority control of the senate. A net gain of 26 seats would give {the G. O. P. 218 and majority control of the house. Majority parties almost always | lose some seats to the minority in| off-year elections. Trend Normally Down
Under the specatacular leadership of the late Franklin D. Roose{velt, the Democrats reversed that in 1934 by increasing their house membership from 313 to 322, and {they also gained senate seats in [that off year. But the majority trend normally is down in off-year polling. Tt almost inevitably will be down this year, The Democratic national committee makes no estimate of how the house and senate will be divided after the election—except to say that both will remain Democratic. Republicans claim they will gain 30 to. 50 seats in the house.
STATE LIQUOR TAX RAISES $8,700,060
| Fund.-Earmarked for Post- | War Building Program.
Pr] Indiana's special . institutional building fund, derived from liquor taxes, has mounted to $8,700,060, it was reported today. The report was made by Dr. fiurrell E. ‘Dieferidorf, chairman of the state alcoholic beverages commission, who noted that Indiana is the only state in which the liquor industry is paying for a major post-war building ‘program for state institutions. ‘None of the growing fund is available until action is taken by the” coming 1947 legislature, however. Because of an oversight, the last general assembly set up the special excise tax, earmarked it/for institutional building, but failed to follow through with an appropria-~
|
{a visit last week—was
FRIDAY, OCTOBER
18, 1946
Entered as Second-Olass Matter at Postoffice * Indianapolis, Ind. Issued daily except Bunday .
Heavy Frost Yo Blanket State On Heels Of Stor
WORLD SEARCH LAUNCHED. FOR WINDSOR GEMS
Loss put at $100,000 by Duke; Suspect U. S. or
- Canadian Gang.
LONDON, Oct. 18 (U, P.).—Scotland Yard today broadened its hunt for a “cat” burglar fleeing with $100,000 worth of the Duchess of Windsor's jewels. A worldwide search was on for operatives of an international gang of gem thieves. The yard asked ship and air lines for information on recent arrivals. The Evening Standard said the theory had been advanced that an American or Canadian gang Aarrived two or three weeks ago to carry out the robbery. Development Hinted The duke and duchess motored to London in mid-afternoon from the nearby home of their host. This prompted reports of some development in the case. The famous Yard threw its best brains into ‘one of the greatest manhunts of modern times. At the same time it sealed off the British Isles with a tight cordon, Through this they hoped the Windsor jewels had not penetrated. Hour after hour messages crackled out over the continent to the French Surete Generale and other continental arms of the law. The messages warned that the Windsor robbery looked like the work of big-time operatives. Such operatives robbed Eurepean society of millions of dollars in gems between the wars. Stately Endam lodge—18 miles outside London, where the Duke and Duchess of Windsor arrived for swarming with officers like a precinct station on election night. Duke ‘Annoyed’ at Exaggerations The duke emerged briefly from the lodge on Titlark hill, the home of the Earl of Dudley. He said he was “annoyed” and “deeply concerned” at what he called exaggerated reports of the value of the stolen jewelry. “There is absolutely my truth in published reports that the value of the jewelry was $1 million,” he said. “I can understand that $1 million naturally makes better reading {than $100,000%-but $100,000 is the sum.” v Might Sell for More
On the other hand, a competent source pointed out that the gems
tion, thereby virtually reusing” the fund. X i
Jue, coubeien. sa peek. 30w
| probably could be disposed of for at
least three times the specified]
amount.
“It must be remembered,” an informant said, “that
“If sold to a collector its value would be increased because of its association with the woman for whom the British king gave up his empire, “It's like buying the jewels of | any historical figure—Marie Antoinette or the Empress Eugenie or
{Mary of Scotland.”
No Arrests Made Flying squads of detectives pounced on five suspects during the night. But all of them proved alibis. ‘No arrests were made, The Yard prefers to work behind a curtain of secrecy until re-
{sults are obtained. However, it was
(Continued on Page 12—Column 3)
GAME CALLED OFF
The game scheduled between Warren Central and Broad Ripple high schools this afternoon on the Howe high school field was called off because of muddy condition of the field.
Who Marred Portrait of Mr. Truman?
WASHINGTON, Oct. 18 (U. P). —Artist John Slavin took a long technical look at a scratch on his portrait of President Truman today and said: “If that's an accident, it's a heck of an accident.” Mr. Slavin went to the Smithsonian institution after officials had notified him that his oil painting of Mr. Truman had ‘been marred. There is a 14-inch scratch on the presidential left cheek. Smithsonian officials had concluded it must have gotten there by “accident.” It was discovered Tuesday. Mr. Slavin stood on--tiptoe and looked at the picture one way. Then he stooped and peered at it from below. “Well, pected,” he said. Mr. Slavin turned to a guard:
it's not as bad as I ex-
“Such a mean thing to do. Some-
PRICE FIVE CENTS |
RISING SPIRAL OF PRICES IS SLOWING HERE
Heavy Supplies of Meat And Dairy Products Halt Advances.
KANSAS CITY, Mo, Oct. 18 (U, P.).~A load of Hereford steers sold today for $38.50 a hundred pounds on the Kansas City livestock exchange, It was a new world's record market ~jirioe for carlot cattle.
Heavy supine of livestock, poultry and dairy products today con-| tinued to crowd prices Sharply. basiy from the record he lowed the end of meat uh 1s A shortage of 100 railroad cars| slowed the local cattle mae
sending prices $1 to $1.50 below yes- | terday's $30 top, as the yards reported the heaviest Friday receipts of the year. The hog market here was steady.
one must have been crazy to- do that.” : The artist said that whether the
{Continued on Page 12—Column 2)
any article | |treasured by the Duchess of Wind- | [sor would bring a price out of proportion to its actual value.
YOUTH MISSION
Fieldhouse.
climactic address of the
fieldhouse.
the guidance of the church Tedera tion's religious education department.
the direction of Philip A. Duey. Author of 13 Books
teligious books and has made evangelistic talks in all parts of the United States. He will speak tonight on “Is the Christian Way the Natural Way to Live?”
| prayer.
| president of the Indiana United Youth council, will introduce Dr. | Jones. Daniel R. Ehalt, secretary
'of the church federation religious
education department, will extend greetings on behalf of the church folk and the city. Herbert Thompson, Milwaukee, will sing solos. .Dr, Jones and Dr. Merrill B. McFall, closing consecration service.
TIMES STRAW VOTE -
® First results in The Times Straw Vote will be published - Monday . . . in all editions of The Times.
® Tabulators—busy on early returns—ask that all persons having received ballots cards in the mail send them to The Times TODAY.
® Watch for the first results Monday . . . it's another TIMES public service feature.
TO END TONIGHT
10,000 Expected at Butler
Dr. E. Stanley Jones will give the United Christian Youth mission tonight at 7:45 p. m. in the Butler university
The mission, in progress sinoe last Bunday, is sponsored by the Protestant young folk of the city under
Approximately 10,000 young peo{ple and adults are expected to be
| present tonight. The Butler-Jordan choir of 125 voices will sing under
Dr. Jones has been a missionary | w to India for 39 years, has written 13
Miss Laurel McPherson, president | of the United Christian Youth) Council of the church federation,
TOM¢cIals expected little change from the $23 reached yesterday. Hog receipts today were 7000. More than 1900 - cattle were received. Lamb prices dropped $3.50 to $4.50 a hundred pounds to a $24 top. A railroad jam all over the nation threatened to tie up the rush of livestock to market. At Ft. Wayne, the stockyards refused to accept hogs, calves or sheep and the sellers- had to take their livestock back home. Yards spokesmen said they expected no cars until Monday -or Tuesday. Meanwhile the yards are full.
Butter Price Drops The wholesale price of butter on the Indianapolis produce exchange dropped from 92 to 84 cents a pound. Earl Hopping, president of
WIDE DAMAGE DONE BY WIND
BULLETIN
WASHINGTON, Oct. 18 (U. P.). The United States charged today that many American have died in Yugoslav prison camps and that others are being used for slave labor. In a note handed Yugoslav authorities by U. 8. Ambassador Richard C. Patterson today this government expressed “abhorrence and condemnation” of cited Yugo-
2 Planes Wrecked, Hangar
sla tices.” . patos id And Farm Buildings included; Unroofed in Area.
Arrest of American citizens . without charges. A heavy frost throughout
ary arisen came to unsanl ithe entire. state of Indiana
Their use as farm labor under (was predicted today by the slave conditions. U. S. weather bureau. ir punishment without ne : ny crime. y Clear and cold weather late remem today followed heavy rainfall - from Lake Michigan to the Ohio °
AFFIDAVIT VOTE = inion nm PLAN RULED OUT:
{Irate A Ningsiorn Sat howled fn ater wnpour ‘State Election B Board Decides Point 2-1.
Would-be voters who are not shown as registered on the precinct records will not be permitted to vote by affidavit. That ruling was handed down late yesterday by the state election board. The board ruled without the assistance of the attorney general, after denying a plea from Democratic state headquarters for an attorney general's opinion on the registration question. Democratic State Chairman Pleas Greenlee said he had requested an interpretation of the registration law “so we won't find out what they are going to do on the night
| recued a pa a man port and farm property néar Greenwood last night, State police said utility poles and wires also were down in scattered areas south of Indianapolis. Strong winds blew shingles from farm homes and damaged other builde ings. At the White Cloud airpert, ons mile south of Greenwood, the wind tore three planes from their moorings, demolishing two and over turning one. A wing was torn from the third plane. Barn Is
before ‘the election as we did in hay. was destroyed by the storm. 1944.” Blustery winds of 25 to 20 wiles Democrats have charged that |Per hour continued howl
thousands of Democratic sores | nroughout ‘other pardons’ of
state, causing minor damage.
the Indianapolis Retail Grocers association, said he anticipated the drop would be reflected by a nickel reduction in the retail price today and probably another five-cent reduction by Monday. Spring chickens on the wholesale market plunged 10 cents a pound, a drop of nearly 25 per cent. Other fowl dipped six to eight cents a° pound and all drops were expected ‘0 be sharply reflected in the prices local housewives will pay in their eek-end shopping. Eggs Remain Same Eggs remained about the same as during recent days in view of the seasonal nature of the present shortage. With pullet laying due to start within a few days, market forecasts indicated the egg market would join other farm products in the slide very soon.
will preside. Robert Funk, director {of youth activities of the Univer-| | sity Park Christian church, will {give the scripture reading and farm commodities did, but removal
Richard Moomaw, Summitville, |
Bloomington, will conduct a
Auto Workers
Touch Off
New Drive for Pay Hikes|.
CLEVELAND, Oct. 18 (U. P.).— Walter Reuther today fired the
[opening blast in a new labor cam-
paign for higher wages to meet the increased cost of livipg. Mr. Reuther, president of the United Auto Workers (C I. ©.), is meeting here with his _ executive board. He said his union tomorrow would issue a new wsdge demand figure on the Chrysler Corp. This demand will be possibly as significant as the 18% cents an hour proposal with which the U. A. W. set the pace for labor de-| mands the last year, A 60-day notice to Chrysler expires tomorrow. ‘The U. A. W, claims 80,000 members in the cor poration. » The U. A W. leader said: “Our basic: philosophy is that we
1
wage 02S Messing:
raises, not by choice but by economic facts. “The tremendous rise in the cost of living is responsible—even though our union led the way in fighting such increases. “We hope to meet this new problem without starting another cycle of higher prices. “We think we can develop enough facts to support our‘gontention that we are entitled to a wage increase
without a further increase in prices.” Mr. Reuther indicated the new
demand might set the pattern for the entire C. I. ©. He said the new figure would not be revealed until after tomorrow's | session,
It will be the first time Mr. Murray has attended a U. AW.
Ci
with C. I. O. President . | Philip Murray invited to sit in;
Supplies of fats and oils other than butter and lard were not expected to increase as sharply as the
|of ceilings yesterday was expected to bring an eventyal improvement in these competitive products. Coffee Price Up
Production quotas and restrictions on oleo-margarine and other similar products were expected to be lifted soon, facilitating increase’ of production. The wholesale price of green cof- | fee reacted immediately to the lifting of price control in that quarter and rose seven cents, The increase was expected to be reflected by increases of eight to 10 cents in retail prices but the ceiling removal was too new to indicate the final price trend.
Commodity Prices Drop Nationally
NEW YORK, Oct. 18 (U. P.).— Most commodity prices continued to decline downside today. Stocks met some suppbrt after a further loss had ‘all but wiped out the sharp gains of Tuesday, whiich | already had been reduced by losses | Wednesday and Thursday.
were disfranchised throughout the state as a result of an
Heaviest rainfall recorded by
eve, warning county election of- where 3.11 inches fell. The rain ficials not to permit affidavit vot-| Was general in northern and south-
AT GREENWOOD
> Sie pli oy pl
A
ing. It was held at that time that if a voter found he was not on record as being registered in the precinct he would have ‘to obtain a! certificate of error from the coun- | ty clerk, showing that he was regis- | tered on the master list. Held ‘Primary’ Law William E. Steckler, Democratic | member of the election board, dissented from the board's ruling that an affidavit still would not be considered as proof of registration. “Governor - Gates and Edwin! Steers, both Republicans, constitute
a majority of the three-man board,” |
Mr. Steckler said, “and I realize my dissension makes little difference. However, it is
ment flasco a Republican legislature |
enacted a new election code so, since we have a new law, I still feel we need a new interpretation.” The Republican members of the board held that the law permits affidavit voting only in fhe primary election and that registration {is
an absolute prerequisite to casting |
a ballot on election day.
Prices Hiked
On Preserves, Jams, Jellies
WASHINGTON, Oct..18 (U. P).| | —OPA took a $6 million poke at the nation’s sweet tooth today. It raised prices of jams, jellies] preserves and apple butter. The "increase will be a cent a pound on apple butter—and two! cents a pound on the others.
OPA estimated the action-—neces-sitated by higher costs to industry]
-—would' boost the nation's annual food bill by $6 million. OPA also granted a 35 to 40 per
well-known | that since the 1944 disfranchise- |
ern portions of the state. Rain Helps Winter Wheat Other precipitation readings: South Bend 1.08, Ft. Wayne 2.18, | Marion 1.99, Indianapolis 98, Terre | Haute 97, Wabash 2.60, Kokomo 2.00, | Portland 1.59, Columbus 1.39, Mar[tinsville 1.19, Vincennes 1.17, Peru [245 and Angola 2.40. The Marion county agricultural | agent's office said the rain was | sufficient to start the germination {of winter wheat. This has been held, up several weeks by the dry | soil.
LOCAL YETERAtvRE
am.....58 Mam.... 52 Tam... Ham... 3 Sam ....5 12 (Noon). 52 tm. mn 2, Tem. . 52
|
POLLARD LAWYERS
WIN JUDGE SHIFT
Trial Date Set Aside by Change of Venue.
Attorneys for Howard G. Pollard, charged with the “hands and foot” {murder of Leland Miller, 21, here last April, today disqualified Crim |inal Court Judge W. D, Bain in the | pending case. The motion for a of venue from Judge Bain was filéd by Frank Symmes, attorney for The | motion charged that Judge Bain was “biased and prejudiced against Pollard” as a result of considerable publicity that disclosed the defendant’s long police record in
past 10"years. | Last week Judge Bain set Pol {lard’s trial for Oct. 28 but this trial | date was automatically set: aside by
Cotton futures broke another $10 Cent increase on men's low-price | the change of venue. A special a bale, the daily permissible limit [Pain white print cloth and lawn|judge will be selected from a panel
of decline. It was the third successive $10 a bale loss. Some cotton prices were at a new low since | July 31.
handkerchiefs, And a 2.4 per cent boost on- work gloves. The price of bronze and copper insect: screen cloth, used to protect
|of three lawyers to be submitted by the clerk of the Indiana supreme‘ court. Pollard is charged with shooting
Grains turned down with wheat homes, hospitals, and some business | Miller to death here and dismemoff as much as 4 cents a bushel on | establishments, went up 135 Der bering the body in Boone county.
top of a 5-cent decline yesterday. In the third hour of trading on the stock market prices were about unchanged throughout the list. Trading lightened from yesterday's pace.
FBI PROBES VOTING IN KANSAS CITY
KANSAS CITY, Mo, Oct. 18 (U. P.).—The federal bureau of investigation has begun an investigation of alleged vote frauds in the Aug. 6 primary elections in Kansas City, it was reported today. The Kansas City Star, which first raised thé issue of fraudulent balloting, said that FBI agents had interviewed members of the city election < board. The FBI had requested the newspaper to make ‘available floriation 8 JY in} Star said.
its pribe, |
»
cen Meanwhile, OPA continued its rapid fire decontrol actions in line with President Truman's speedup policy. Officials estimated that ceilings on almost all major foods
(Continued « on Page 12—Column 4)
GLASS WORKERS WIN 12-CENT PAY INCREASE
CLEVELAND, Oct. 18 (U. P.).— Wage increases averaging 12% cents an hour today ‘were granted to 80,000 employees in the. glass industry. « The raises were agreed upon at negotiation sessionis between the Flint Glass Workers union (A. F. of L.) and the Glass Container Manufacturing institute and. the
National Association of Pressed and)
Blown Glass manufacturers
CPE Sa ge
EGYPT'S PREMIER SEES BEVIN LONDON, Oect. 18 (U. P).— Egyptian Premier Ismail Sidky Pasha held two long conferences today with British Foreign Minis~ ter Ernest Bevin.
Home With Income Available : Pesirable North Side Duplex
Juvenile and criminal courts in the
*°
In 100% rental location mear ~ :
