Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 28 October 1946 — Page 5

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hardwood d in 0. D. s and two . are new s and covluck,

the shipping strike.

MONDAY, OCT. 28, 1946

u S. MARITIME STRIKE ENDED

400,000 Mine Workers May]

Walk Out Friday.

y at the expense of the ‘govern~ ment’s present wage control policy. Relaxing or abandoning wage eontrols would step up the drive already beginning for another round of wage increases. This in turn would affect prices in some industries. Would Step Up Drive “If the administration stands on Mr. Krug’s decision, it faces an admost certain strike Friday. Mr. Lewis has said refusal to negotiate would void the present agreement. A mine shutdown quickly would retard industrial production. A miners walkout would involve 400,000 miners, § President Truman also could expect political repercussions whatever course the administration took. It appeared inescapable that many miners striking against administration decisions would vote against administration candidates in the congressional elections Nov. 5. Can Sway Close Vote Their vote could be important in the outcome of close contests in such states as Pennsylvania, West Virginia, Kentucky and Montana. Outside the coal fields, the coal affect the views of

(Continued From Page One) Ne.

ispute may NE oters dissatisfied with the admin-

Joteation's handling of labor rela-

ou prospects were brighter in This costliest walkout in the nation's history neared an end today. Meanwhile, the picture strike at Hollywood moved still closer to settlement, but little progress was reported in attempts to settle the pilots’ strike against Trans-World Airlines, Inc. Elsewhere, three unions formulated wage increase demands in the automobile, rubber and textile industries. The 28-day shipping strike had kept 1181 vessels riding idly at anchor in Gulf and East coast ports. Hundreds of others were tied up on the West coast. The basis for settlement of the strike was reached Saturday.

1181 Vessels Tied Up

The settlement negotiations did not affect striking unions on the west coast. But members of the Pacific-American Shipowners association met with officials of the C. I. O. Longshoremen’s union in an attempt to remove one minor obstacle to settlement, The C. 1. O. textile workers announced at Boston that a general wage increase of 15 cents an hour vould be demanded for 90,000 cot-hn-rayon workers © in’ the New

4)

TW REC PAT'S PEND COPR 1946 EOW L

NATIONAL 24-HOUR FORECAST SUMMARY: Northern New England and the upper Lakes region will be cool Monday night, but elsewhere in the eastern half of the U. 8. there will be mild temperatures for southerly winds prevail south of the fronts.

The east is also promised clear to partly cloudy sky conditions and no rainfall, except the showers in Plorida, Minnesota and the Gulf coast.

Temperatures will rise in Minnesota, Iowa, Wisconsin and Michigan as the warm front in the upper Mississippi valley moves northward.

It will be cold or cool, however, over most of the western half of the nation and considerable cloudiness will accompany the various types of precipitation indicated for the Dakotas and sections west of the Plains states, The northern and central Plains states will have scattered snow flurries or showers and snowfall

England and Middle Atlantic states. At South Bend, Ind, the policy committee of the C. I. O. United Rubber Workers met to formulate wage demands on the Big Four rubber manufacturers. It was indicated they would follow the pattern set by automobile and steel workers. Fight at Milwaukee At Philadelphia the increase to be asked by the United Automobile! Workers (C. I. O.) was indicated| in a statement by President Walter | Reuther, that wages are lagging 20! per cent behind the rising cost of living. Negotiations are to begin

A. WAGNER ALL RIGHTS RESERVED

Period Ending 7:30 RMEST 1009 & To

Si THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

THE WEATHER FO TOCAST vn ACME TILEPHOTO

Preview of U. 5. Weather Bureou Forecant for

$

DRIZZLE

SNOW SHOWE

I vas * V/A * ~~

in the Dakotas may likewise take the form of showers or snow flurries. But rain is forecast in parts of Colorado and western Washington; rain showers will occur over the Plateau region and southern regions of Idaho, Wyoming and southeast Oregon. Northern California's mountains may also have snow flurries as cold weather moves into that sector. (See FOTOCAST). Most sections of the west will be cold Monday night and Tuesday morning. Even the southwest and southern Rockies will be somewhat cool tonight, but temperatures will rise a bit in western Washington and Oregon. An invasion of cool air will lower temperatures north of- the standing front in northern New England and the upper Lakes, but further south a flow of warm, humid air will bring temperatures above normal for the season in most eastern states. Local frosts will occur in northern California by Tuesday morn-

Illinois Union of Telephone Workers (Ind). They sought wage increases from the Illinois Consolidated Telephone Co. «

Ford, G-M Walkouts In Canada. Settled

WINDSOR, Ont., Oct. 28 (U. P.). ~The C. I. O. United Auto Workers announced today new wage agree- | ents have been reached with General Motors Corp.'s Canadian di{vision and Ford of Canada covering 17,000 production workers. George Burt, Canadian U. A. W.! regiomal director, said the 7000 |

ing, according to the Weather Bureau district forecasters in that area.

OFFICIAL WEATHER

United States Weather Bureau (All Data in Central Standard Time) ~Oect. 28, 1946

Sunrise .... 6:08 | Sunset..... 4:48 Precipitation 24 hrs. end. 730 a. m... .00 Total precipitation since Jan. 1 .... 2689 Deficiency since Jan. 1.. cesemss OY

The Joriowing table shows the temperature in other cities Station

High Low ALIADtD ...eniiiriiiiniininins 68 55 BOSIOR *sviveriessnrsrnciiriis 80 55 Chicago ..... 72 50 Cincinnati 7 41 Cleveland kil 50 BRVEr vou. 56 33 Evansville, i 53 Ml. WAYD® «.......... 2 43 Pt. Worth 81 62 ndianapolts’ (city) 74 57 nsas «1 65 Los Aris 63 54 Miami 81 7

Minneapolis-St. Paul .

New Orleans . vee 86 71 New York ‘ees “rT - Qkiahoma Clty “as vr 15 63 aha . 12 64 Prtsbargh’ . 74 52 St. Louis « 13 60 San Antonio . 65

San ancisco Washington. D. C.

IN INDIANAPOLIS—EVENTS—VITALS

{WARNS OF PERIL

2 LABOR STRIFE

| Industrial Institute Opens! At French Lick.

FRENCH LICK, dnd., Oct. 28 (U. P,) —Carroll E, French, director of the National Association of Manu-

|facturers’ institute on industrial re-

lations, said today that the national economy will be jeopardized unless there is a “marked improvement in labor-management relations.” Mr. French spoke at the opening session of the 10th institute, a fiveday seminar which drew 200 industrial leaders from all parts of the country. “There never was a time when {the nation's economic welfare was |more dependent on solving labor- | management problems,” Mr. French (sald. “Unless there is a marked | improvement in labor-management relations and a decrease in indus‘trial strife, our national economy will be jeopardized and American living standards will suffer disastrous effects.” Delegates arrived from 28 states and the District of Columbia. The largest contingent, 30 delegates,

‘and Michigan and Indiana 11 each. Chief speakers were Ira Mosher, chairman of the board of NAM; Lawrence A. Appley, vice president

Clarence O. Skinner, manager of the Washington office of Automotive | and Aviation Parts Manufacturers, Inc., and Forrest E. McGuire, executive vice president of the Syra-

ciation:

FIND UNEXPLODED BOMB

| ROME, Oct. 28 (U. P.).—An un-| ‘exploded bomb was found outside {the Italian chamber of deputies today. Precautions , were taken |throughout Italy against the possi- | bility of violence on the 24th anni-| § fromary of the blackshirt march on| ' Rome.

City Official Is Garbage Collector

'must be considered above the welfare of any group,” the mayor sald. “City health authorities have informed me the five-day accumulation threaténs a potentially dangerous situation.” Marly volunteers poured into the assembly area from Tulane university, where President Rufus Harris excused from classrooms all students who volunteered to collect garbage. Four of the 45 trucks pressed into use today were manned by members of Tulane's aloof Delta Kappa Epsilon fraternity. Several other Greek brotherhoods were expected to ocontribute collectors. The strike started five days ago after the city refused to give garbage men an extra day's pay for dou-

Friday.

WOMAN OVERCOME, AIDED BY FIREMEN

came from Ohio, while New York Smoke and carried out of her home {sent 26, Illinois 17, Wisconsin 15 unconscious in one of three resi-

{early today.

of Montgomery Ward and Co.; 8ene st,

cuse, N. Y., manufacturers’ asso- where her condition was described

One woman was overcome by

dential fires here last night and

Mrs. Josephine Bifield, 827 Eu-

was found unconscious on (her bed by firemen who answered | an alarm at her home last night. She was rescued by an emergency squad and taken to City hospital

as “fair.”

Firemen said the fire apparently was started by a cigaret. Fire of unknown origin damaged | the first floor of the home of Mrs. Mary Coleman, 525 Prospect st. last | night. Early today flames swept through part of the first and second floors of the Samuel Johnson home, 2904 Scofield ave. The cause of the blaze was pou determined.

MARRIAGE LICENSES

Byron L. Mitchell, Albany, Ill ; Reba Gene Ri IME

Donald Sherman Milledge, 142 W. 36th; Charles BE. McCormick, 110 N.' Belmont: Elizabeth M. Runane, 1723 Hall pl. Virginia Largent, Crawfordsville. Donald nx R. R. 9, Box 589; Patricia |Hyld H. Price, 633 Lyons, Hilde M Joan Church, 34 N. Layman. Funkhouser, 1225 Aubrey Humphrey, Wanamaker; Ethel Biward M. Reynolds, 19 8. Bradley; Dottie Huston, R. R. 5, Box 425. YT Jean, Alfred Paul Kottkam 537 E. Sumner Andrew Elmore, 600 W. 17th; Delores! Stella May Reed, FY ison. Daniel, 1011 W. 27th. Willing 0. am, 1 Kenwood; VanWalter Franklin Jensen, 1315 E Sumner| lla Manier, 7137 W. ave; Edith J, Petrakis, 6102 E. Wash-| Michael Daffron, 1919 N Tang; Mane in. N. Fo 745 N.

ald Joseph Smith, me

DE iaavein Ida Kiel, 911 | Floyd Marion S8kiles, 856 Boa ave; elyn R. Cox, 349 E. Minnesota. | Leroy Edwin Lorentz, in Ingram; Jeanne M. Davis, 1537 Steele

N. Talbott; State

Ev-

with Chrysler and Packard next workers at General Motors ap- Irwin Estridge, 5101 E 38th: Ruth May

week.

rupted telephone service in 18 central Illinois communities. The strikers, including operators and maintenance men, are members of the

oir A ——

Songs and Stories

for the Children’s Hour . . . all in

Columbia Recordings

Puss in Boots, 2.36"

Cinderella, 2.36*

For Ve

print Story

Peter Rabbit, 1.31*

The Little Red Hen, 131* Little Black Sambo, 1.31%

4S Apes & G0

ALBUMS with illustrated covers . . . Robin Hood, narrative by Basil Rathbone, 5.09*

v

Jack ond the Beanstalk, 2.36*

The Whale Who Wanted to Sing at the Met. Sung by Nelson Eddy, 3.15%

Little, Children ' 4 Albuns with

< *

Records, Eighth Floor

Harper, 1318 E. Southern ave. | proved an offer of 13 cents an hour | w Duni 36 Em.

A strike of 300 workers inter- and 10000 Ford workers accepted | | William FP.

an offer of 12 cents an hour more.

INCREASE IN DOLLAR

A 40 per cent increase in dollar sales during last month over Sept. 1945 was registered by 997 Indiana independent retail stores exclusive of department stores. Gains of 34 per cent were made by 213 Indianapolis stores for the same period, however, this was a decrease of two per cent from August, 1946. Twenty-four department stores in the state showed a 25 per cent increase in sales this year over September a year ago.

ilfred Gaybrilie Owens, 3961 tcher. Coffman, 1631 Ladiow; gene Lane, 1831 Brookside a | Neil % y, 1325 8. De ‘Gwendolyn ’*. 1604 Howard, No. 2. Wiitam ‘Eimer Dixon Jr, 51 N. Keystone; 2708 E. North.

SALES NOTED HERE "sii snide i % Keone: mun

Wine te L , 3453 E. 26th; Frances E. Carr, 2200 Winter ave Harley Richardson, 547 N. Belmont; Dolly Garland, 568 N. Traub Eugene L. Pavey Jr, 909 Congress; Dorothy Yoder, 709 N. Rile ey. Robert Satterthwaite, 1119 N. Kealing ll, Lawrenceville, iil

n. George Pranklin Weaver, 1746 Blaine; Ave-

lyn A. Pringle, 1914 Dexter. William C. ivan, Camby; Betty Lou killman, Plainfield.

Earl G. Evans, 1401 N. Pennsylvania, No.

3; Dorothy = Young, 1401 N. Pennsylvania, No. Wayland Re Bme Knoll, U. 8. A.; Mary Imogene Query, 3 Lincoln.

Imo- | Roy

Gosn Lynn Trusty, 3026 Jackson; Betty | h son

Ly Leo ping. 102 WwW. ®rroy; Alice M Rabbe, N. LaSalle John a 928 N. Senate; Nellie Wilkey,

18556 Quill Carthel Say, »™. Ben, pin Raszison;

143 8 mund 1 Sudlik, 510 S Addison; Florence er, Addison Ee “i 4 823 8. State; Nellle MeAllister, 1104 easant. Robert Meriweather, PIN Del Selman; M. Richard

Nona

E. Goodman, Worthington: Meida Willey. Wortht Harold Bailey, 421

Ninh; Wanda M Way.

Jordan, 1 N. Broad

BIRTHS gy 5 Jranels-_Herhett, Ellen Stanker, d Robert, Bernice Ma er AC Cit wr A Flossie Nugen At eman — Michael, eras Prelepa, and Morgan Jr, Dorothy Atwell t St. Vincent's — b- ilma Smith; Michael, Marie Baker; Brutus, Viola Turner; Charles, Prances Hart; Leslie Bette Hukriede: Charles, Edith Meyer and Orville, Lucille nes.

e At Methodist—Morris, Gladys Creek; Roy, Jaiiian Stanley; Per, Dorothy Salsberr Morr Jean Carr; Charles, ot Scheibie: Clyde, Marjorie Lorton Jack, Evelyn Hassenfritz, Glenn, Eloise Guthrie; James, Leatrice Williams, and George, Marie Kerr,

Indiana Artists Club

FIFTEENTH A

Exhibit

OCTOBER 29

NNUAL

THROUGH NOVEMBER 9

AYRES' TEA ROO

M FOYER

At Home—Edwin, Margaret Cubel, 1923 W to : Marion, Louise Davis, 5315 W. Regent st; Wesley, Marie McCoy, 928 Massachusetts ave. am, Angie Brown. 2414 Sheldon st. and William, Marjorie Reager, 40 N. Chester st.

Boys . Francis — Virgil, Peggy Clayton;

t Russell, Betty Jane Volpp, and James, Waldeana Camden,

At City—Marion, Ovara Ward; John, Winnie White. James, Letha Porter, + and Charles, Alice Clark At Coleman—Edward, Betty Schilling; Yof a Lichtenberg; Charles, Isabel Telling; Gilbert, Evelyn FPForeman, and ronard, Grace Schwartz

William, Helen jan; r Hiram, Roberta Sexon; Anthony. Maian Santoro; Thomas iflin, Ber

Ma T! Rard, , Bay Dallas; Thomas.

ovic: Joseph, Lois Reed, . len Dowdell; William, Thelms Barclay: Norman, Norms Comer; oysM Matte Plnger; Bdgar, Zelda Zeiw, Prances Hickman: Leroy Reno;

Pauline ay, Betty Rainboit Herbert, Charlotte Burns: Driscoll, Mary Cain; Robert, Marie Blank; Arthur,

Frances Crass: Francis, Betty Doan, and Henry, Martha Swindat, At Home -— Jesse 1615 W. Michigan st; Raion, Sielen Lang, 1539 BE ashingto ; Lester, ldred Lee, 1028 River Re Dewey. Maree Witcher, 3207 Ralston st.; Melvin, Mary Smotherman, 1718 Lafayette rd. and Hildreth, Mary Perdue, 2121 Martha st.

DEATHS

Lois R. Green, 45, at City, nephritis Mittie Kumble, 46, at 2518'% N. California ave, carcinoma James C. Costelow, n, at 10 W. Morris st, earcinoma. Arthur B. Johnson, 56, at Methodist, ulcer. Alex Robinson, 77, at 1120 Charles st, cerebral hemorrhage. Sarah Woods, 72, at 1648 Northwestern ave, hypertensive heart. Ward Caldwell, 60, at 587 W. Morris st, coronary occlusion Rosie Cartwright, 58 ‘at City. leukemia. Roscoe Dukate, at 907 N. Keystone ave, cerebral hemorrhage Mary Mupier, 81, at 1623 8. Talbott st. chronic myocarditis Nellie Snyder, 00, at Methodist, cerebral hemorrh: Ennis Kitterman, 82, at uremia. Louis Weeden, 84, at 845 W. 26th, cerebral hemorrhage

St. Vincent's,

Edward Austermiller, 63, at 4001 Rosslyn ave. cardiac failure, Virginia Godbey, 1, Riley, pneumonia. Mary Fielder , at “0 N. Jefferson ave, arteriosc 5 Vivian Russell, 20, at 8t. Vineent's, as

thma. Charles Tyler, 63, at Long, clusion. rt 8. Watson, 61, ave, asthma

coronary oeat 13 N. Keystone

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