Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 13 February 1947 — Page 13

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NEW YORK, Feb. 13.~—Mayor system of preventive medicine in

Mr. O'Dwyer on last Oct. 1 se

The division is headed by Edward C. Maguire, an attorney and former magistrate, who served as labor relations adviser to A ai former Mayor Fiorello La Guardia and stayed in the city hall in the same capacity when Mr, | O'Dwyer came into office. The city labor relations division does not dupli- ; cate the work of the state and fed- Mr. Lahey eral mediation agencies, nog, does it try to compete with them. Mr. Maguire is interested only in those potential or threatened labor

fuel, transportation, public utility systems and medical supplies.

set up, 20 industrial disputes of major importance have arisen. Sixteen were settled without work stoppages, largely through the preventive work initiated by Mr. Maguire. The mayor's labor relations division watches for expiration dates of collective bargaining contracts in vital industries, and nudges the parties to these contracts into renegotiation meetings at an early date. If the parties to these labor contracts do not seem to be near agreement within 15 days of the expiration date, the mayor's labor relation man asks either the state or federal mediation services to lend a hand. 3-Man Committee "If it later appears that the negotiators are not responding to the efforts of mediation, and that there is danger of a strike, Mayor

O'Dwyer formally asks the union and the employers to maintain the status quo. The mayor then appoints a three-man citizens committee to use their talents to resolve the dispute. The committees are usually made up of some public official, an industrialist or business man, and a labor Jeader.

workers and their employers was one of the first jobs the mayor's Jabor relations division tackled last October.

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To Settle Disputes

Mayor's Office Keeps Tab of Contract

Expiration Dates in Vital Industries : By EDWIN A, LAHEY" Times Special Writer :

It is working remarkably well dn the basis of early performances.

a division of labor relations whose duty it is to see a labor crisis in the stage of gestation, and do something about it.

disputes that would affect food,

Since Mr. Maguire's division was

A dispute between 2800 tugboat

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& doctors’ formula to relieve discomfort 'of PILES;

ida THE INDIAN Aous TIMES Board O'Dwyer Sets Up

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ommittee

William O'Dwyer has established a labor relations in New York City.

t up as part of his executive office

The citizens’ committee appointed by the mayor in this dispute was given exclusive credit for averting a strike. The job was done through the “connections” the committee members had in both camps of the disputants. The mayor's labor relations division also is credited with helping avert work stoppages since last October in a Western Union dispute, and in situations involving -funeral drivers, custodial workers in the {public schools, bus drivers in Manhattan and Staten Island, and wholesale grocery workers.

Copyright, 1947, by The Indianapolis Times and The Chicago Daily News, Ine,

Sumner B. Hosmer Rites Tomorrow

Services for Sumner B. Hosmer, 5703 E. Washington st., will be held at 2 p. m. tomorrow in Moore mortuaries, Irvington chapel. Cremation will follow. A. resident of this county 35 years, Mr. Hosmer died Tuesday in City hospital. He was 73. Born in Tonawanda, N. Y., he was a coal mine manager 25. years in {West Virginia, He was a member lof the Downey Avenue Christian ichurch, Masonic lodge, Shrine and Knights Templar. : Survivors include a son, Windsor; a daughter, Miss Virginia, both of this city, and a sister, Mrs. Lucy LaFever, Lockport, N. Y.,, and his wife, Mrs. Katherine Hosmer.

Mrs. Edward F. Maiden

Services and burial for Mrs. Edward F. Maiden, Chicago, will be held at 2p. m. in Franklin, Ind. A former resident of this city, she had lived in Chicago for 30 years. A native of Iowa, she died Tuesday. Survivors include her husband, Edward; a sister, Mrs, Margaret Chew, Chicago, and a brother, Emmett Daugherty, Chevy Chase, Md.

‘Jacob -Platisha

| Services for Jacob Platisha, 1850 N. Sharon ave., will be held at 8.30 ‘a. m, tomorrow in the Stevens fuineral home, and at 9 a. m. in Holy Trinity Cathoiic church. Buria] will be in St. Joseph's cemetery. Mr. Platisha, who was 71, died | Tuesday in his home. He was born {in Yugoslavia and lived here 45 {years. He was a member of Holy Catholic church and the {Slovenian Benefit society. Mr. Platisha ‘was a retired molder. Survivors are a son, - Joseph Platisha; two daughters, Mrs. Anthony Sumrak and Mrs. Victor Sumrak, “all of , Indianapolis, and four grandchildren.

Miss Hazel Buckner

Services for Miss Hazel Bell Buckner, an Indianapolis resident since 1942, will be held at 1:30 p. Mm. tomorrow in Shirley Brothers Central chapel. Burial will be in Crown Hill. Miss Buckner, who was 22, died Tuesday in her home, 1069 W. 28th st. She was a native of McCreary county, Kentucky. Survivors are her parents, Mr. and Mrs. George W. Buckner, and three sisters, Miss Ovada B. Buckner, Mrs Beulah Koester and Mrs. Jesse Lee Hammer, all of Indianapolis.

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Asks U.S. Buy

Dutch Guiana -

Puerto Rican Makes Proposal to Marshall

By H. STUART MORRISON

Timés Special Writer MIAMI, Fla, Feb. 13. — Over-

populated Puerto Rico is casting covetous eyes on Dutch Guiana.

Gen. George C. Marshall, new United States secretary of state, already has received a request from a former member of the Puerto Rican house of representatives that the United States purchase The Netherlands’ South American colony. Antonio Pacheco Padro, author and veteran of the Spanish civil war, in which he served with the Lincoln battalion of the international brigade, is the sponsor of the proposal. Bauxite Stock, Too Pacheco Padro has written Gen. Marshall, outlining his plan, and citing historical’ and humanitarian reasons for it. He points out that acquisition of

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Dutch Guiana would do more than merely provide living room for crowded Puerto Ricans.

JIt wotild also, he says, provide

the United States with ownership of the source of 65 per cent of our bauxite supply. And, he points out, right now a Dutch concern, the Billiton Co, is preparing to compete with Alcoa, the American “big.one” of the aluminum industry.

Population Is Small” Dutch Guiana, better known as Surinam, has a population of only 178,000. in a territory of 58,000 square miles—less than four inhabitants to the square mile. Puerto Rico, with a population of 2,101,000, has only 3423 square miles —some 544 persons (0 the square mile. 5 : Pacheco Padro sees inh the projected Dutch Guiana acquisition a chance to shift thousands of Puerto Ricans from dependence on Uncle Sam’s largess to a new land of opportunity. But he's not overlooking the present political battle raging in Puerto Rico, which one day will decide whether that jsland shall remain a colony of the United States, be-

come a new state in the union or

9 to 5:15 Daily 2

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another American republic. He proposes that Dutch Guinea,

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WASHINGTON, Feb. 13 (U. PJ).

—~Herbert H. Beck can take that]

| boat “ride up .Chesapéake bay In a blizzard any night now. On a flagpole above historic Pt. | McHenry, Md., he will see “the star-spangled banner giving proof to the world that our flag is still |there'—just as it was when Franjcis Scott Key wrote the national anthem aboard a British warship in the harbor, :

Mr. Beck is director of the mu|seum a% Franklin ‘and Marshall college, Lancaster, Pa. Not long ago he wrote a letter to the na‘tional park service, which said: | “Recently I was coming up the | Patapste river toward Baltimore at twilight's last gleaming. I looked

{toward Pt. McHenry to see if our Jo

flag was still there,

| if bought, be incorporated as part “of the political body of Puerto Rico.”

Copyright, 1947. by The Indianapolis Times and The Chicago Daily News, Inc,

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