Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 25 April 1947 — Page 10
lo FURNITORE
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Lawn Chair, Reed Seat ____________ $10.95 Lawn Chair, Reed Seat and Back ____ 12.50 Lawn Rocker, Reed Seat __________ 13.26 Lawn Rocker, Reed Seat and Back ___ 14.75 Lawn Chair, Reed Seat and Back ____ 19,50 Ottoman te match above chair _____ 9.25 4-Ft, Glider, Reed Seat and Back ____ 42.50 4-Fi. Glider, Hickory-Slat Seat & Back 39.95 30-In. Coffee Table, Oak Top leas 29.95 Chairstomateh ........ ......... 11.25 Coffee Table, Oak Top and Shelf ____ 16.50 Coffee Table, Round Oak Top _______ 14.95 Coffee Table, Rectangle Oak Top ____ 16.50 Lawn Settee, Reed Seat and Back ___ 23.50 End Table, Oak Top and Shelf ______ 12,50 Child’s Chair, Reed Seat ___________ 6.95
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aa Tne = f= THERFORD'S: ne.
settlement except on the basis of a cash offer, The cabinet session lasted only 30 minutes. Afterward, Secretary of Interior J. W. Krug said of the strike discussion that “the only new {thing was that they are e starting all} om again.” His reference to the ) new bargaining negotiations arranged by the government was almost identical
6. M. and Union To Sign Today
11%-Cent Increase Basis of Agreement ‘(Continued From Page One)
with the remark of a conciliator| that “we're just starting all over : again.” Thanksgiving day and Christmas. The companies involved in the Two hours after the agreement ,.y pargaining conferences were was reached it was approved by al, 7 & T's long distance division, 200-man national conference of [Western Electric Co., and the delegajes representing U. A. | Southwestern Bell Telephone Co. locals in more than 90 G. M. plants oy member of the Bell System. across the nation. However, it The long distance talks got undes still has to be approved by the ... today. The Southwestern Bell
rank and file. ] Abtaaliv and Western Electric sessions start] The agreement was virtually the | iomorrow.
same as that which G. M. made| with the United Electrical Workers |
and the United Rubber Worker} both C. I. O. affiliates. arie ta joar |
A union spokesman predicted that | | Chrysler Corp,
with whom the junion has been negotiating since! Dies Here at [ll | October, would sign up on virtually | {the same terms next week. Ne-| gotiations with the Ford Motor Co. | ‘were expected to open soon.
Phone Strike Talks Start All Over ! Services will be at 2 p. m. to-
April 25 (U. P.). morrow in Shirley Brothers Central | —The cabinet discussed the na- | chapel with burial in Crown Hill 'tional telephone strike with Presi-| Survivors are two sons, Troy and | |Arnold Sr.; a grandson, Arnold Jr.,| |dent Truman today. land two sisters, Mrs. Pearl Coiwell,| | But the best anybody in the gov- gl] of Indianapolis, and Mrs. Ger- | | ernment could find to say for publi- | trude Goodrick, Shelbyville, 1. | cation about chances of settling the die 19-day-old walkout was: | “We're starting all over again.” Payroll Clerk Reports | Labor department conciliators got | ‘Writing Bogus Checks {officials of the striking. National! SHELBURN, Ind. April 25 (U. | Federation of Telephone Workers p ) Authorities today investigated | (Ind.) and key companies together ag confession of a Buffalo, Okla. | again. man who said he wrote bogus But neither the American Tele-| checks valued at $500. phone & Telegraph Co. nor any of | Joseph McCuvney, 71, said his its subsidiaries would agree to make guilty conscience drove him to the ia wage increase offer. And strike police statiog. He told police he leaders and government officials was employed in the payroll de{alike felt there was no hope of partment of an industrial concern
Mrs. Marietta Edgar, an Indi|anapolis resident 40 years, died yesterday in her home, 1622 Hall pl | She was 70. Mrs. Edgar's husband, Edward | Edgar, died April 1. Mrs, Edgar | was born in Shelbyville, Ill
WASHINGTON,
|in the Oklahoma town. After writ{ing himself the checks he skipped
. THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
Expects Muncie Indictments
(Continued From Page One)
tract, city expense for streets outside the corporate limits, disposal]
of contraband liquor and city hall
salaries. The clean-up forces are interested in the financial status of
some Muncie officials who they say have become affluent since taking office. Note of Mystery A note of mystery will be added to the vice drive if witnesses demand a searching investigation as to the identity of an unidentified
i girl buried in a pauper's grave here. { They
imply her death should be | probed on the- basis of vice and | White slavery. Ministers and league members {also are prepared to supply the | grand jury with names of tip book | printers and to whom the tickets | are sold. At least five establishments probably will be pointed out. Meanwhile, an alleged tie-up between a ¢ity official and a slot machine king will be spotlighted, and efforts will be made to name a person as the pay-off man for houses of prostitution. MILROY WOMAN, 93, DIES Times State Service 'MILROY, Ind., April 25.-—Rites were held here yesterday for Mrs. | Lucy Webb, 93, oldest resident of | this community. She died last Tuesday evening following a pro-
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Jerome Davis to Speak
Here Sunday Dr. Jerome oY author and former president of American Fed-
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“
I'RIDAY, APRIL 2, 1047
eration of Teachers, will speak at] times and his topic will be of that 3:30 p. m. Sunday in Antlers hotel| country. He has taught at Boston, Harvard, Dartmouth and WisconCommittee to Win the Peace, sin universities and is the author Mr, Davis has visited Russia 11|of a book, “Pe Soviet: Power.”
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+ Closed Shop
Who wants the
’
’
NOT THE PUBLIC ten people favors the closed shop—which requires every worker in a company to belong to 2 union BEFORE he can be hired.
« + A 1947 nation-wide poll revealed that only one out of every
NOT THE WORKERS . .. The same poll disclosed that only onc out of every tea of the nation’s manual workers favors the closed shop.
NOT EVEN THE MEMBERS OF UNIONS... According to this same study, among union members themselves, one out of every five favors the closed shop.
THE PUBLIC has learned by bitter experience that the closed shop, together with industrywide bargaining, gives union leaders almost unlimited power—power that can stop the production of goods, shut off an essential public service, and put the health aad coméost of hundreds of thousands of people ia jeopardy. wh
MANUAL WORKERS as a whele know that the closed shop can deny them the right se work in their chosen jobs—unless they join the unioa.
UNION MEMBERS themselves have found that the closed shop means they must forfeit their individual freedom and follow uméon dictation, whether they agree wikh the righencss of such dictation or aot!
IN THE PUBLIC INTEREST, as well as in the interest of both industry 20d labor, the National Association of Manufacturers believes that all forms of compulsory union mess bership should be prohibited because they are contrary to the American way of life.
Write for your copy of “Americans Won't Stand for Monopolies,” which includes the full text of NAM's program for industrial peace and national prosperity. Address: NAM, 14 West 49th Street, New York 20, N. Y.
NATIONAL ASSOCIATION OF MANUFACTURERS
“
oan
For a Better Tomorrow for Everybody
A
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