Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 1 March 1948 — Page 5
To Open Tomorrow
polis, ye Sunk Mar, 4 (UP) 3 huical_ High y it will refuse any Wage inyal Order of sinfiationary.”
The company said & pay boost
Kenneth &. of living higher and peril recent rs, Mra, Ross cuts up to 10 per cent on avotis. > ll {1 GE line of products from
to radios. General Electric will open laon CH negotiations tomorw with the Workers (CIO). 3 The union opened contract talks today with Westinghouse Electric Corp. second largest producer in the industry. Seeks ‘Substantial Boost The union has announced Tt will ask “substantial” wage increases to make up for an estimated loss of $13.03 in weekly purchasing power for its indial members since 1945.
the reduction ‘would not help pay for" rent, food and They contended that GE could cut prices, raise wages and still make a fair profit.’ Both General Electric and Westinghouse have agreed to extend the basic provisions of their contracts with the union for another
year. 1 This closed the door on possipilities of a dispute over the colJective bargaining rights of the UEW, which has refused to file pon-Communist affidavits - under the Taft-Hartley law, . Sees Living Cost Effect The extension of the contracts’ basic provisions did not rule out the right of the union to strike over wages or other issues under negotiation. General Electric officials said a general rise would set a new pattern for all American industries and ‘would have a nation-wide effect on the cost of living. Westinghouse has not announced a stand on wages. However, Gwilym A. Price, president of Westinghouse, indicated last week that the company might be able to raise wages “a few cents” an hour without pushing up prices. At that time he pleaded!
for wage stabiiy. fo stabilize prices.
Advertising Heads To Talk at Butler
Indianapolis advertising and publicity personnel scheduled to Address classes in the Butler University journalism departTent during the early part of March have been as by Dr. DeForest O'Dell, head of the Journalism department.
wR ives D. Walker, execuve secre of the Indianapolis Advertising Club, addressed the advertising theory class of Prof. Nomsuond R. Jones a. 9 a m
George Saas, head of the Saas Advertising Agency, was to address the publicity and ‘public ations class of Prof. Jones at
Roscoe Clark, manager of pub$F JOM. ~ LAMY flr Cy - WIL “address the latter class Friday. Noer of the Indianapolis Engraving Co. will speak before a dan on photo engraving on.
Receives Assignment
First Lt. Hilden D. Pickering, fon of Mr. and Mrs. 0. E. Picker- | ing, 805 N. Hamilton Ave. has been assigned as commanding officer ‘of headquarters detachment of the 557th Composite Service Battalion (Philippine Scouts) af a Samp O'Donnell,
United Electrical
When GE cut prices two| monhts ago, union spokesmen said
-lated tomorrow by the Butler
ROLLING MILL —
The Kaiser-Frazer Corp. rolling mill in Indianapolis nears completion. The mill is on the site of the former Chapman-Price Steel Co. Extensions
and modernizations are being made by H. D. Tousley, Inc., general contractor.
Await Lewis Coal Strike Threat
coal strike to win pensions for his miners.
notifying them that ‘the Unité Mine Workers’ ident will terminate his current contract Mar. 30 unless. the pension dis-| pute is settled. - So 1
cept that the govern-| | ment could and doubtless would) set in motion its emergency pow-
But the new labor law authorizes [Federal Court injunctions to prevent for 80 days a strike that imperils the national welfare.
Threatened ‘Action’ Mr. Lewis notified the prod
tuted a breach of the contract.
pendent action.” He demanded thaf' the union welfare and retirement fund begin immediately tp pay $100 a month pension to miners age 60 with 20 years’ service. ? Operators refused. They began a nation-wide survey ito form the {basis of a counter offer tc be | financed without any increase in [the industry's present 10 cents a ton jevy for the union fund.
Butler SDX fo Initiate
men and nine Butler Unjversity journalism majors will be initi-
chapter of Sigma Delta Chi, national professional journaiism fraternity. [ Walter Leckrone, editor of The Indianapolis Times, and ofiles Tiernan, promotion manager of
professional
members * to initiated. : er
include Robert Haymond, junior; Edmund H. Robert... DeHofL,... senior. Averitt, junior, and William Me- | Warren Cal, Collins, Tell City, sophomore. Odom Off for Hawaii
OAKLAND, Cal,
takes off today for Honolulu on the second leg of his. trip to pilot a scientific expedition over the Amne-Machine mountain range a
Central atral Luzo
y SAN MIGUEL DE REGLA, ob People die every year from a
A proportionately large num other Anierican industrial cities,
i tspiratory illness, many of] y hich are due to air pollution, 80 are responsible for about 80 Per cent of the time lost from Work, Dr, Mills said. oe Pointed out that even such Chien 23 Los Angeles and Mexico Y, Which once boasted of their h air and sunshine, now ‘And me boner Dutied much of the of pollution,” a; intitatng Sanopy
Studied Seven Cities
Air Pollution i in Cities Blamed for High Mortality |
Physician Says 700 Die Each Year | . From This Cause in Chicago Alone
versity of Cincinnati said ina paper prepared for delivery here today.
China.
He threatened to take “inde1100-
9 in Chapter Tomorrow § Two Indianapolis newspaper-|&.
dol K Butler students to be inducted 4
Irwin, S0phomore; M
Mar. 1°(UP)—{A Round-the-World Flier Bill Odom Ame
Cattle Prices Gain 25.50¢c I
In Active Dealings H Here
Lightweight steers and heifers
were strong in a limited market, tending higher in a meager rwar-|Canner Mine operators already look ket test. Slaughter ewes dropped for letters in their mail today $1 from Friday's bulk.
Mar, 1
TO CHOICE HOGS. (5050)
120- 140 180 pou 168. 1%
Medium— 160- 230 pounds
uch oh ers 30 days ago that thelr fail. Goad ure to agree to pensions consti-
Rh along with cows, all weights, GS pounds ............ 7108310 Pensions for. Miners moved actively todax~ at “the S100 Pl aasebet by Fenn . |Indianapolis Stockyards, reaching] 600- 00 pounds ............ 34.50921.50| Sought by UMW 25 to 50 cents higher than| 800-1000 pounds ............ 1.50 WASHINGTON, Mar. 1 (UP) |Friday’'s bulk. Vealers remained soo- 900 POUNAS ...vvviese.. JRODENN.50 ~John L. Lewis may indicate SieaaY. ed pall Sl Coy pounds. i. ivetssa 13002200 today whether he will | Cows (AN Weights) F whet her call a soft $1.25 higher, while fat lambs|ceed A
Bulls (AN Weights)
rem INpLANAPOLS 7 TOES
T5100 000 Workers Heavy Water’ Plt
1 ce
that of a ot Seanh, boy, ue to-rables. “From the present trend, 1048 b! SI have SII cases Of FRDIES ot and Thought den tely 8 {with the pilot before breaking
involved than others. ties most affected so far this year are Marion, Lake, Elkhart and Bartholomew. >
vaccination will give very good protection for a year.”
50 in oe Reports to Rotary
Paul Speicher, member of the
3000-Foot Leap To Death Blamed
LOS ANGELES, March 1 (UP)
3 hn Francisco, former divinity student who served with Gen. George 8. Patton's armored division in Mr. Strand hired ‘the plane
free and jumping. He and the pilot, William Probert, had been! sitting side-by-side in the two-
|seated cabin plane.
“He seemed very nervous when he hired me to take him for a ride,” sald Mr. Probert, co-owner of a private airfield with actor
_|Andy Devine. “He kept urging
me to climb to 5000 feet. He said
MAN he'd never been that high before.
Then’ he opened the door and tried to dump."
MR. PROBERT said he struggled with Mr. Strand while the plane lurched into a dive. Then, while he turned to grab the stick to right the plane, he said, Strand broke free and jumped into San Fernando Valley, Mr. Strands wal, was found in the plane, apparently dropped from his pocket during the fight.
theiinside was a note which read:
“Please don't hold the pilot
the responsible. I wanted to go now
and this is the best way.” Mr. Strand’'s father, Thore I Strand, sald in San Francisco that he blamed his son's death on “war shell shock.”
LEOPOLD TO SEE JAMAICA KINGSTON, Jamaica, Mar. 1 (UP)~—King Leopold III of Belglum, now visiting in Havana,
Club tomorrow noon in the Claypool Hotel.
dp the Indianapolis Star, are the Indols be
Cann, junior, all of Indianapolis;| io 1 Tengblad, Chicago,| Pub Serv senior; Robert Darmer, Mentone; | po. sophomore; William Pace, So * | Bicknell, junior, and Robert G.
Mexico, Mar. 1 (UP)-—More than ir pollution in the city of Chicago
ber die from the same ‘causes in| Dr. Clarence A. Millis of the Uni:
investigators moved from” the cleaner city suburbs: into . the dirty air of the Industrial and business districts. He waid fatalities were three to 10 times heavier among men than women. | “The finding that death “ates from respiratory tract cancers rise along with those from oneu-| monia and (respiratoty) tuber-| culosis points strongly ‘te a gen-
as the basic factor :nvolved,” Dr. Mills sald. “Economie, ‘housing and nutritional factors appear of much less importance than air pollution, as evidenced by the|
became inand severe as
Th ——
difference between male and female hazards.”
eral (respiratory) tract irritation]
ences
hr
0 [ond B large, 3c: rade
.Butterfat—No. 1, Ts; No. 2, 3 Te he
= veut iti B small, |
Yeggs Take $359
1751 Boulevard - Pl,
. open i nu A larger safe failed. = safe failed.
and Your
Sight
"Seu
Safecrackers broké open a small safe in Automatic Canteen, |
Saturday night and took $159 in cash and a $200 check. Their attempts to
Cotton BEDSPREADS
8]
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(all Weights) ...veeices 31.00923.00 roe 2. um... 2. 0004121.28 Cutter and common 19.50 00% * 24.65 CAL ( 24.50924.75 Good to choice " 4 2.75 to medium 24.76 [Culls (76 pounds UP) ....iveis 3.0062 24.25 Steers eT 20 Poster aad Stocker Cottle and Calves 1.0% 000 DOUDES ..ocsvesnnes nHeNN seats 11.35020.5 00- 800 DOUBAS «ovnesessers UNG -1000 pounds cessnsinsenie 10.50018.00 | 153 400- 900 pounds . . 1.001080 19.00 Outves | ed : 19.90 | Good te saa ioh on ver BOONE inn ws 500 pounds ant 4 dows . Ie.
will visit Jamaica within the next|g two weeks, it was reported today.
On ‘Shell Shock’
Brings 11 Arrests
MUNICH, Maf. 1 (UP)—The
blamed newspaper Suddeutsche Zeitung| =
said today that 11 persons have been arrested by German police
4, |im-a plot to sell-a-large supply of
heavy water brought to Munich from Norway before the German collapse. Heavy water is a material use: ful in nuclear research. The supply was sald to amount to
eight half liters, Durigd Wh hunt {num containers by a versity assistant on his estate near Ammersee.
sell the heavy water to Swiss interests who offered 60,000 Swiss francs per bottle.
Bandleader’s Daughter Reported Seriously Ili
HOLLYWOOD, Mar. 1 (UP)— Bandleader Frankie Carle canceled his two-week tour of southern cities today to rush to the bedside of his seriously {ll daughter, former vocalist Marjorie Hughes. The 20-year-old singer, who {lert her rather's Band Jast fall has been hospitalized with éomplications resulting from the loss f an expected baby. Mr, Carle returned here by diane from Columbia, 8. C,, after two nights of the scheduled twoweek tour,
‘Ship Ablaze at Sea
SYDNEY, Australia, Mar. 1 (UP)~The liberty ship Cecil G. Sellars is ablaze in the Indian Ocean, 1500 miles west of Frementle, Australia, and may have to be abandoned, the Gibbs
7p m Merchants Bank branch for the purpose of organizing a
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