Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 23 October 1946 — Page 19
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ial ig ie, i i Te lis : TT 4 i : R | i : Sy hy - Were is i Tate a He . WEDNESDAY, OCT. 23,1948 __.__ = THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES-2.(..._ ~~ er x : tienes: PAGE JS
“. fo . r. . “ ‘461 od . sh Ae - % ron s .. EF TE "Industry Intensifies Drive to Eliminate All Wage Controls; Move by Lewis to Lead New General Pay Fight Is Seen \ Lh ; PE 3 ; » =p : ' i » ; . 4 : id 3 J oi : oy {ikon "+" By'UNITED PRESS . | the line “in 23 states and 15 differ-’|visers struggled with the outline of soft coal mines since Miy 22, Te-| up tothe government in- the threat-|suggested that Mr. Lewis try ‘to Pilots union (A. F. of L) negoti-|were 100 per cent in favor of gone +'« Industry's drive. for ~complete ent countiies.” . : . {a méw wage decontrol order but turned the first punch. Mr. Lewis ened coal strike. He had asked Mr. work out an agreement with the | ating committee, said at the con-|tinuing the strike until the des - elimination of wage controls gath~| THREE: Negotiations in the 23- [were still some steps away from |retaliated ‘with another, containing | Krug to start- new wage; negotia-|mine owners and rélieve the gov- clusk on of a morning negotiating mands concerning ship captains are -ered steam today as the government| day East and Gulf coast maritime whipping it into final shape for the ja veiled but very real threat of a tions ‘inder the government's con-|ernment of operation, : granted. : , - |strike were reported at an impasse | President's okay. :
Bill? DHT . nto oe tor “trbuole, *
-had all its dred pecple .
session with East and Gulf coast
: - . walkout by his United Mine Work- | tract with the miners within 10|' The national mediation board re- A wt was to met POR sred how: raz B Should ge. I over ‘the issues of ‘preferential ‘em-| One source said the -order may |ers (A: F. of L). > £ by l days. . : 7 entered the w age disputé between | Steamship operators that “our WOM AN JUDGE TO v his purpose, Bg ¢ pay . ployment ad Jusinienapce of | be timed for release with new vegu-| Mr. Lewis’ moves two weeks be-| Last night he sent Mr. Krug a |, Ww. A ‘ahd 1400 striking pilots membership will take nothing less” ° R ip. 1 & cuts.. ‘ i membership for shipmasters. lati fr the - 2 al electi -|letter which said 1 rt: hot Bb - He and’ 1 ations om e OPA and de-|fore the congresfion ections im w n pa with the anmouncement that it may| han, inclusion of ship masters in ADD ESS ROUP HERE
r the possie Other developments-in the gen-| FOUR: A threatened strike. of {partment of agriculture removing |mediately excited speculation about
ney pigeons, wouldn't -@ aret picture
1 saying, in-
. - A “Failure on your part tb honor 7000 employees» of° the Western price. ceilings from qdditional com- | his motives, which, as in’past years, this meeting will constitute another |28k the
1 labor scene included: } NE: An apparent move by John |Umnion Telegraph: Co, (C. I. O.) in modities. | were regarded as broader than his breach of contract and will void | negotiations Lewis, backed by his threat of|the metropolitan New York Was yn his hold dash into a fight with declared objectives. [the Krug-Lewis agreement.” auspices. a national coal strike next month, postponed for at least'a week. Secretary of Interior J. A. Krug| That speculation suggested he! Inasmuch as the min-rs tradi-
J the new contract. Judge Camille McGee of disputants - to ' resume Capt. Ash said representstives of Kelley. of
¥ Bt the juvenil under government | 4, ship companies, headed by|,.® J ii & sow in Memphis, : | Frank J. Taylor, president of the! hb» principal speaker at Both the company and the strik- American Merchant Marine insti-|the all-day annual meeting of the
tights) “and to grasp leadership of a drive to| Industry members of the wage Mr. Lewis put himself’in a strategic may want to set, rather than ac- tionally refuse to work without a/ing A. F. of L. Airline Pilots/tute, up to the present had been State Probation association to Indianapolis win new wage increases and destroy | stabilization board and the National | position to lead the wage drive. He|cept, the pattern for the next round contract, Mr. Lewis’ letter meant! association appeared willing fo Jet | ad&mant against union security for | held Saturday in the Lincoln k on my col- government controls, Association of Manufacturers and also raised the threat of a nation-| of wage increases. Also he may that the 400,000 soft coal miners the government make the a ios masters, . |it was announced today, nal $2 cash TWO: Trans-World airways an-|the Associated General Contractors wide - bituminous mine shutdown— seek to smash wage controls, to would be pulled from the pits Nov. for settlement. The strike has im-| Negotiators from Norfolk, New
A native of Tennessee, J Orleans, Baltimore and Galveston Kelley was appointed in 1020, the and Houston, Tex. said they had first woman south of the Mason. &
nounced that because of the|0f America joined to urge complete perhaps on Nov. 1. perhaps on Nov. challenge the Smith-Connally act 1 unless thie government agrees to mobilized T. W. A.'s 28,000 miles of T. W. A. pilots’ strike it was neces-| abolition of government restraint on (as winter approached. . |and to provide himself a forum on negotiate. domestic and foreign air routes. Mr, Krug and his federal coal ad-| (he eve of the election. In reply navy Capt. N. H. Col-
knocks but the pigeons,
sary “immediately to furlough with-| Wage rates.
’ | Capt. William Ash, co-chairman contacted their local memberships.|Dixon line to hold such a position them down out pay” about 15,000 employees of! , President Truman's economic ad-| ministration, which has operated| Mr, Lewis placed the next move lisson, federal coal administrator, of the striking Masters, Mates and (They said they were told members and second in the United States. went to the - - : - . pigeon was . : “ ck in Chest- L vner, 1 susd them back
TS locks fe
\
enough tiick
ever, the boy vas” ithe curse ber that the He invested e next thing 1 the pigeons. an who sold nd, believe it ed to be the on the South nce belonged by the boy's fying spring
ve happened in just about
n all $2 "0 State
p here, which t, would forenat would be
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