Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 17 July 1948 — Page 11
pending
the nation is such that \ to limitation of taxa-
y tax should be limited ome of $20,000 and over,
eral Government existed Sunrise ew on ’ . - . ts, whisky and tobacca. Total” precipttation since Jan. 1....23.32 ywns and cities likewise Duficiesicy, sihee Jin. Leite . o . xing to two per cent of peratiire in other cities: A on real or personal prop. “Station High Low jon of assessments and Atlanta . PRR Ter np ei 91 170 ton .... he deceased. team: Fo tax era. Cincinnati mark the beginning of Cleveland . 8 ‘encroachment upon in- Evansville 3 inheritance rights and Ji Jame i] other words, there must Indianap
: spending. ould be drastically and aw. We must get over o this and that and not , Nerishing the taxpayers
rd Straight’:
pcord straight in regard ontrol, I want to quote jonal Chairman Carroll ere in Indianapolis last e principal Lincoln Day dianapolis Women’s Rethe Columbia Club ball with a reporter before hat Mr. Reece sald. cline in commodity prices
Indianapolis Times and ure with it. So Mr. Reece r on what the GOP does. ces were on the decline, tof us who buy groceries vill not think that way
Today's,
Official Weather.
Kansas Los Angell
am Minnea New
KEENE
SATURDAY, JULY 17, 1948
TRS
.
ph AR
x he
TONIGHT AND TOMORROW—Cloudy skies, scattered showers and cool temperatures are
otocast
Snub Politics,
Hatch, Green Urge GOP
Southerners Map Move To Snap Civil Rights WASHINGTON; July 17 (UP) —Two Democratic Senators appealed to Congress today to forget politics and do something
about high prices at the summer session. |
predicted tonight and early’ tomorrow for upper New England and’ the Ohio Valley. By dawn the mercury is expected to be in the 60's. See the fotocast map for a
within the next 24 hours.
y ED STATES WEATHER BUREAU UNIT —July 17, 1948—
olis (City) . City ...
|
reas where rain may be expected
Physiotherapist
(ets Prison Term
Fraud Charges Bring
3% Years, $500 Fine
Harry B. Francis, ex-president of the Indiana College of Physiotherapy, N. Meridian St.,, was sentenced to three and a half
72 |years in a federal penitentiary bluse
and was fined $500 by Judge Rob-
¢2 (ert C. Baltzell on mail and fund-
raising charges in Federal Court
$8 |yesterday. 64
Francis, 57, was found guilty on May 18 by a jury. He was charged on six counts with a fund collection scheme in which he was to finance a lobby for a bill in
DRUG STORES
¢ k At pretty to look at—a new | romium and streamlined
arge where battered Old | , dripping oil. When my to roll it .out and give
American, using it much he question. 1 people can have a caf he time you pay for the g left to finance oil and
p. ; : 0 is to take a spin around * and then you may by a load of lads in &
or Vote? W. Perkins
lenge to organized labor jon this year will bring a
REPAIRING
at Our Usual LOW PRICES Day Service
RITE'S
JEWELRY SHOP
43 S. lllinels St.
C
few D th of Washington SL riled walls Deal 8) Rites”
California which would have permitted naturopaths to practice there. The bill failed to pass and Francis failed to return funds to contributors, the government charged. Defense attorneys. indicated they would appeal the case to the Circuit Court in Chicago.
Payrolls Here Hit All-Time June High
Weekly payrolls for Indianapolis in June hit $4,226,712 for an all-time high, the Indiana Employment Security Division reported today. This was a gain of 7.6 per cent over May and 12.7 per cent over June last year. Wage earners in the city totaled 85,571 for June as compared with 74,460 for May and 75,765 for June last year, the report said.
Plan Spaghetti Dinner . To Raise Church Funds
An Italian spaghetti dinner will be held Wednesday at Henninger Methodist Church with funds to go to a “Big Brother” movement for boys of Warren Township. The dinner will be held at 6 p.m. at the church. Services of an Italian chef have been obtained. The “Big Brother” movement was adopted by the church a few months ago.
VAGRANCY CHARGED Zdrave Bogoff, 63, of 5201 W. Washington St, was ¢ with vagrancy last night after police found two knives in his possession.
Sen. Carl A. Hatch (D. N. M) {said Republican leaders should] {accept President Truman's pro-| {gram of standby wage-price controls and rationing, or come| {up with a better one of their own when Congress reconvenes July 26. Sen. Theodore Francis Green (D. R. 1) said he's willing to| ‘give due credit to the Republicans if we can get some good laws enacted to curb prices and relieve the housing shortage.” “Congress,” ‘said Rep. Hatch, “already has been too neglectful and too lax because the inflation issue was presented flatly last November by the President in his 10-point program to stop the price spiral. If Congress fails to act now, no alibi of ‘politics’ can| excuse its neglect and failure.”
Why Not Try This? Family Scrapbook
| By DR. ERNEST G. OSBORNE a,
3 for Aggression
In the day-by-day business of growing up it is inevitable tha every child will have experiences that make him angry. If mother doesn’t allow him to pull up her flowers, if the dog knocks down the house he has built with blocks, if he feels left out when mother and father are talking together —these and dozens of other situations stir up resentment and irritation. He wants to strike out, hit or, kick someone or say a bad word. Such reactions are quite natural. And yet, it hardly seems wise to let him kick the dog, hit his mother or. insist on interrupting the parental conversation. Too often, he is forced to bottle up his feelings. But this is not a good solution, either. One simple and harmless way of draining off these natural feelings of anger is to provide clay which he can pound, pummel and squeeze to his heart’s content. Another outlet that works is to have a hammer pounding outfit—either one of the peg-board type or, even better, a real hammer and a heavy chunk of wood. It may seem silly to you, but iong experience shows that such activity has the desired effect.
20000 Openings In National Guard
WASHINGTON, July 17 (UP) —The National Guard still has
a
BUSINESS DIRECTORY
onse, according to union gn
miocrat with Truman sym hat “as usual the labor | th the Democrats getting sre_is no prospect of the . Franklin D._Roosevelt " iders have figured their r can get 30 per cent of important part of the xpected to be aimed that
or Plank med almost fighting mad y acceptance speech that 1d be the most ungrateful they pass the Democratic
, director of the AFL Education, said Mr. Truted by “the fact -that in bor has enjoyed its great: this country, with total
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openings for some 20,000 youths who want to get out of the draft, the Army announced today. Maj. Gen. Kenneth F. Cramee, chief of the National Guard Bureau, said there are two groups who may fulfill their service obligations by enlisting in the Guard rather than serving in the regular forces. These are youths who have not reached the age of 18 years and six months, and veterans who served at least 90 days but less than 12 months before Pearl Harbor or after V-J day. An “escape clause” in the draft bill granted exemptions to all men who joined the Guard before President Truman signed the measure into law on June 24. Mr. Cramer said rassage of the new selective ervice act spurred enlistments to unprecedented heights. During the two weeks ended June 30, he said, some 66,422 men signed up for the Guard, boosting the overall strength to 319,663. This is al-
ago.
Aged Man Charged A T4-year-old man was held today on a charge of vagrancy, police said, after he made improper approaches to two small
k (children last night in the 700
block on Ketcham 8t.
DIES OF INJURIES TERRE HAUTE, July 17 (UP) —George Launca, 73, died yesterday of injuries suffered Monday when he walked into the
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Denounces Truman Plan
The Republican leadership in the House and Senate repeatedly has denounced as a “police state! scheme” the President's plan to fight the high cost of living.
The GOP pushed through its own anti-inflation program based | on voluntary controls a few months ago. There appeared little chance that its leaders would look with favor now on the administration’s more stringent proposals. They claim these would result in “another OPA.”
Some Congressmen doubted that the anti-inflatior issue would even get an airing at the forthcoming session if the civil rights bills are brought up first.
Talk of Riders
Southern legislators already are mapping their strategy to kill or at least cripple the anti-lynch-ing, anti-poll tax and anti-dis-crimination measures which Mr. Truman has asked. But with both the Republicans and Democrats committed to party platform planks calling for action on civil rights, southern Senators saw cloture—or debate limitation—inevitable.
“The Southerners were talking
ing or fair employment legislation such controversial issues as removal of the federal tax on oleo-
the oil rich tidelands to states. The idea of these tactics would be to gain support from nonSoutherners ® who oppose those measures and thus sidetrack the civil rights issue.
J Pedestrians Hurt in Traffic
Three pedestrians were injured in local traffic accidents yesterday. ’ Mrs. Catherine Henderson, 58, of 6100 Rockville Rd, was struck last night by a car driven by Harry Wenz, 18, of 3440 Broadway, at Washington and New Jersey Sts. She was taken to General Hospital where her condition was described as fair. Struck by Taxi Albert A. Crump, 49, of 1304 Broadway, Apt. 5, was in a fair condition at General Hospital today after he was struck by a taxi driven by Virgil H. Housel, 40, of 2029 Carrollton Ave. The accident occurred when Mr. Crump alighted from a street car at College and Massachusetts -Aves. Housel was charged with failifg to give a pedestrian the right-of-way. George Davis, 29, Huron Hotel, was injured when he was struck at Washington and Gale Sts. by a car driven by Clarence Dornte, 46, of 313 N. ‘Arlington Ave. He is in a fair condition in General Hospital.
(Crash Kills War II Hero on Birthday
ORANGE, Va., July 17 (UP)— Col. Leroy Rainey, much decor-
killed yesterday on his 37th] birthday when his’ fighter plane| crashed in flames near here. The colonel, who was a member of the Strategic Plans Group, Joint Chiefs of Staff, was on a cross-country proficiency flight out of Bolling Field, Washington, C
During the war, he flew 53 combat missions in the North African and Mediterranean theaters. He was awarded the Legion of Merit, Silver Star, Distinguished Flying Cross with |cluster, Air Medal with nine iclusters and the Purple Heart.
Little Hope, Huh?
| BRISTOL, Conn., July 17 (UP) |—A city official urged today that something be street signs, side by side, reading
“Bristol Hospital” and “Dead End.” Ship Movements By United Press New York Arrivals—Z, B. Vance, Brem-
erhaven. New York Departures—African Grove, Matadi; Marine Carp, Piraeus; Marine Mormac apetéwn; Halifax; Santa Sofia,
mouth; Victory, Ci Dakar; Pt. Amherst, Cartagena.
| USED TIRES
THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
2 Democrats Ask Congress To Curb Prices Weather F
of adding as riders to anti-lynch-|314
margarine and the surrender of|P¢™
ated World War II flier, was|®
done about twoly
pine, Oslo; Talisman, [to be used f
PAGE 1T'
End of Payroll Fight
Due in Pro
By OSCAR FRALEY, United Press Sports Writer
Football
‘The Times Freak Squeak Contest Enters Third Week
Additional Cash Prizes Await Writers
Of Letters on Near-Accidents * By ART WRIGHT The third week of The Times Freak Squeak Contest opened
today with more cash waiting persons who relate the best accounts
of accidents that could have caused serious injury or death—but
NEW YORK, July 17—Fearless Fraley's facts and figures:
This is going to be the last year of warfare between the pro Letters postmarked by next Friday midnight or brought to The football leagues, the National and the All-America Conference, for Times by that hour are being con-
if they both manage to survive the throat-cut they'll bury the hatchet in self defense. <3 Some NFL moguls still think they can freeze out the AAC but| In addition to the
their faith is fading. For two years they have tried and failed. Meanwhile, both lose money as the players play one against the other until backfield salaries average a fantastic $15,000 and linemen average $7000. The re-! sult is that nobody makes money. So if the AAC can hold out another season the NFL's inner, council plans peace overtures! which would wind up in a joint] draft of college stars—and a chance for both leagues to make! money because of tremendous! salary slashes. LJ ” . QUOTE OF the month: The bard of Brooklyn, Branch Rickey, was discussing Dodger pennant hopes and, emphasizing the desire to win the flag, said: “Gentlemen, we are all immersed in the bathtub of a common purpose.” : To which Branch Jr, known as The Wig, replied: “I'm a shower bath addict myself.” Draw your own conclusions.
also
. . . GUY LOMBARDO, the bandleader addicted to music and motors, doesn't fear new model boats which threaten] his speedboat reign. Recent win-| ner of the Glenn L. Martin and Ford Memorial races, Guy and his Tempo VI are out to recapture the Red Bank Regatta and the gold and silver zups. Twice this year he has broken the Gold Cup craft record for the measured mile, now holding the mark at 118.209 miles per hour. “There are some 25 new boats out this season but I haven't seen
LEGAL NOTICES BOARD OF ZONING APPEALS 1 OF PU
LEGAL NOTT BLIC IG Notice is hereby given that the follow ing titions have been filled with the Board of Zoning Appeals, City of Indian. apolis, Hesting a variance from thi requirements of the Zoning Ordinance: 43-V-48—PAUL W. B Northwest Corner Kealing jvenue & 9th Street, requests variance of use to permit the construction of a building, sfse 26’ x 80’, to be used for designing and manufacturIng automatic rang Jachines, 24-V-48—0. EV GREER, 3733-41 North Keystone Avenue, requests variance of use to permit the construction and operation of a theatre building, with ace cesso Off-street Barking. 325-V-48—ROD! A. Pl , Tear 2034 Westview Drive, requests variance of use to permit the wholesale & retail f automobile parts and accessories
sale o in the existin arage building. 326-V-48— MOREY fA DOYLE, 3318 East 34th Street, requests variancé of building line requirements to perm the construction of an addition to the west side front of the existing residence, this addition to extend to within 40° of the front Ioperty line 327-V-48-SHIRLEY BATSON, 418 East 10th Street, requests variance of use to it the operation of a beauty shop in ope apartment of the existing 8-apartment
building. RVIN C.
328-V-48— MA MENDEL, rear 1446 Naomi Street, requests variance of area requirements to permit t construction of a two.car garage at the rear of the existi residence. 329-V-48—AR GEST, 1708-10 East Washington Street, requests variance of building line requirements to permit the construction of an addition to the existing building, this addition to extend to the front p: rty line 330-V-48—D. C. BEATRICE NG, 806 Locke Street, request variance of use to permit the construction and operation of a two-room retail store
vujlaing. 331-V-48—SHERMAN PERRY, rear 1118 Hoefgen Street, requests variance of rear yard requirements to permis use of the existi ning as livin quarters, 332-V-48-—JA E. SWOPE, 8 North Keystone Avenue, requests permission to omob! y, fender & motor repair shop in the existing building located at the rear of the premises known as 2334 East Washington Street. 333-V-48—LELAND R. WEST, 3905 Caroline Street, requests variance of use to permit the operation of a heating service —the basement of the existing residence, the garage and rear yard area to used for storage of ent & supplies and a portion of the residence to be used as an office in connection with this opera-|
fon. | 334-V-48—BERT L. H . E. KEEL-| , rear 3210 North Talbott Avenue request variance of area and rear yar requirements. to permit continued use of a portion of the existing garage building a3 empotary hyin Juarters at the rear o! e existing dwelling. Hav ae PVERA L. BLACKBURN, 842 North Dearborn Street, requests variance
of use to permit the operation of a beauty shop in eé front room of the existing residence.
336-V-48—FRANK D. ILLIAMS, rear 1009 North New Jersey Street, requests expansion of a non-conforming use to mit the sensticiion a an a Mion to e existing cabinet and carpenter s op. 337-V-48—CARL L. & MARIE 8. ' 638-40 North Jefferson» Avenue, request variance of use and area requirements to rmit conversion of the existing double ouse into a tee lolly dwelling. 338-V- R. S8TANDIFORD, 5135-56 College Avenue, requests permission to operate an open air automibile sales lot. 338-V-48 — ALICE FITZPATRICK, rear 1534 Blaine Avenue, requests permission to park and occupy a trailer, with at. tached movable room, at the rear of the existing residence. 340-V-48—JOHN N. WELLS, 4550 North Keystone Avenue, requests permission to operate an open air automobile sales lot. 341-V-48—WARREN BRINKLEY, 6010-14 East Washington Street, requests variance of use to rmit the construction and operation of a drive-in sandwich, confectionery & ice cream parlor, with cessory off-street parking 342-V-48—L. M. BRENAN, 3415 North Sherman Drive, requests variance of use to permit the construction and operation & commercial studio, size 25’ x 40°. 343-V-4§9—MRS. J. C. KEMBLE, 941 North Rural Street, requests variance of use to permit the continued operation of a beauty shop in one room of the existing Jesidence,
GER & . R. HUGHLEY, 2113-15 Shriver Avenue, request variance of area requirements to permit the conversion of the existing double house into a four-unit apartment £
building. 345-V-48—CHARLES KRUSE MOTORS, INC, 873-875 Virginia Avenue, requests variance of building line requirements to permit the construction of an automobile 3nlds x service building to the front property line. 346-V-48—CLIFFORD H. NORMAN, 3827 College Avenue, requests variance of use to permit the construction and operation of an automobile sales & service eulding 347-V-48—LOUIE MOLLER & GLEN . RADEL, 8outhwest corner 38th Street & Orchard Avenue (1707-15 East 38th Street), request variance of use to permit the construction and operation of an automotive sales & service building, with off-street parking Jaciilies 348-V-48—FRA. SWEIGART, rear 1115 Windsor Street, requests variance of use to rmit the occasional repair of automobiles in the existing garage. and/or rear yard of the ER Beadence DAVID 8 ER
ac
349-V- G, 2452-24684 Bouth West Street, requests variance of se to permit the construction and opera-
tion of a retail grocery & meat market, with accessory o ree, Jarang 350-V-48—PAUL D. LUCAS, 0 North Capitol Avenue, requests variance of use
to permit the operation of a funeral home & ambulance service in the existing resi-
351-V-48 — RO T H. GIPBS, 2414 Brookside Avenue, requests variance of rear yard requirements to permit conversion of the existing two-car garage into livin Juariers at the rear of the residence. 352-V-48—TED'S MARATHON Vv 1461 West New York St
or accessory offin connection with the operation of the filling station on a Jor ey 353-V-48—FRED C. MORGAN & HARRISON ORG, 3810 Washington Boulevard, request variance of use to permit the existing residence to be used for . raphy studio & trousseau service.
ALL SIZES be ‘heMd by the Bosra of Zonise Aspects e e ard ol 5 Fully Guaranteed and Jon Monday, July 26. 1048, at 3°30 BM. G00DYE ® Jin Room 401 City Hall, at which time and DIEAR SERVI STOR: Bt ntateied Firions wil BC ives n reference 1N.D Ww he alters set out in aid petitions. Rl ley 1486 3 . ZONING Noble P. Hollister, Executive Secretary
won the Hambletonian trotting
{year as the Dodgers have of fin-
b¢ player and a native of Indianapo-
anything to fear,” serted . . . =
Lombardo as-
didn't,
Midnight last night was the
ting payroll demands!sidered for the third week's prize| {of $5.
weekly |
(award, the winner becomes eligi- | {ble for the grand prize of $25 which is awarded to the person’
HARRY POWNALL, the Grand who writes the best letter of the
Circuit's only Brooklyn driver!
classic with Titan Hanover in 1945 but doesn't give himself much hope for this August's classic. { “I've got as much chance of winning the Hambletonian this
ishing in the foist division—and that ain't much,” Pownall commented. At the moment you could inter-| pret that to mean look out for! Pownall and a colt called Kilroy.
four weeks. at midnight, Friday, July 30.
enter. The near-accident you relate in your entry must have happened to yourself or a member of your immediate family.
The contest closes
Winner of the second week con-
test will be announced in next Wednesday's Times.
Costs Nothing to Enter
doesn't cost Keep your
It anything to
letter brief.
Complete your letter with a
statement in 25 words or less,
‘My Freak 3queak taught me this |
” o =” THE FAMED “sophomore jinx” safety lesson... |
which supposedly affects second!
All entries become the property
year men under baseball's big top/0f The Indianapolis Times and doesn’t seem to be working over-{the Indianapolis Safety Council.
time this season.
Thomson of the Giants, Spec
Only Bobby) ThE decision of the judges is final.
The Indianapolis Safety Coun-
Shea of the Yanks and Gerris|Cll is co-operating with The Times Fain of the A's have had bad/in sponsoring the safety-promot-| trouble, Vic Raschi of the Yanks|IN& contest.
is sensational and you might say!
it's a fairly good year for such Squeak Editor, sophs as Earl Torgeson of the Times, the Indianapolis 9.
Braves, Jansen of
Giants, the “new” Jackie Rabin-
Larry
the Yanks and Wally Westlake o the Pirates.
Upsets Scored in Chicago Net Play
CHICAGO, July 17 (UP)—Upsets were the order of the day yesterday in the quarter-finals of, the national clay courts tennis championships as Tom Brown, San Francisco, and Gardner] Larned, Chicago, seeded Nos. 1 and 4, were defeated.
Sam Match, San Francisco, 6-1,| 2-6, 7-5, 6-4. Larned was defeated by Clarence Carter, San Francisco, 5-7, 5-7, 6-4, 6-2, 6-1, in a match which took three hours to play. Magda Rurac, Bucharest, Ru-| mania, scored the only upset in the women’s division of the tourney as she dropped third-séeded Marta Barnett, Miami, in the quarter-finals, 6-1, 4-6, 6-0. In the men’s doubles quarterfinals play Vini Rurac, Bucharest, and Art Larsen, San Francisco, downed Herb Flam, Beverly Hills, Cal., and Eugene Garrett, 8an Diego, 6-4, 1-6, 8-0; Match and Tom Chambers, Los Angeles, defeated Jim and Jerry Evert, Chicago, 9-7, 6-3; Brown and Richard Gonzales, Los Angeles, dropped Cleo 8innard and Frank Moore, Chicago, 6-4, 6-4; Larned and Bernard Bartzen, San Angelo, Tex., defeated Herbert Behrens, Ft. Lauderdale, Fla., and Irving Porfman, New York City, 6-2,
Strack to Coach ~
Wolverine Frosh
ANN ARBOR, Mich., July 17 (UP)—David H. Strack, former University of Michigan basketball
lis, has named an assistant in the physical education department of the Wolverine school. He! will also act as freshman basket-| ball coach. Strack played for Michigan during the 1845-46 basketball season and starred at Indianapolis Shortridge High School during his prep school days.
Horseshoe Pitching
Indianapolis Industrial League horseshoe results at Brookside Park last night: Phoenty Press won three from Monarch eel,
ho] =
i (UP) — Somebody (here, but not in a regular base-
13 Marines Sent Brown dropped his match to, TO Jerusalem
Send to Freak| Indianapolis
W. Maryland St,
all entries
214
any of the son of the Dodgers, Yogi Berra of Thieves Steal Home |
‘At Tomahawk Field |
CHEROKEE, July 17
stole home|
Iowa,
ball game.
Police Chief Art Locke said home plate was stolen, literally, from Tomahawk Field, the home of the Cherokee Midgets, Thursday. “Maybe this baseball lingo has gone too far and given somebody the wrong idea about stealing,” Chief Locke commented dryly.
WASHINGTON, July 17 (UP) ~— President Truman has approved the emergency transfer of 13 Marines from the Navy's Mediterranean fleet to guard American personnel and property in Jerusalem, the State Department announced today. The department said that Adm. Louis E., Denfeld, chief of naval operations, has ordered Adm. Richard L. Conolly, commander of the Eastern Atlantic and Mediterranean forces to “expedite”
the arrival of the Marine squad at Jerusalem.
7000 Attend Novena At Monastery
Approximately 7000 attended the. close of the annual outdodr (novena to Our Lady of Mt. Carmel on the Carmelite Monastery grounds last night. Archbishop Paul C. Schulte was assisted by the Rev. Matthew Herold and the Rev. Francis Early in the candle-lighted servce. The novena speaker, the Rev. Francis J. Corley, 8. J. pleaded to “entrust the future to Mary, the Mother of God.”
Mrs. Henry McGinnis
Dies in Columbus
COLUMBUS, July 17 — Mrs. Anna J. McGinnis died in her home here yesterday. She was the wife of Henry J. McGinnis, for many years with the Irwin Union Trust Co. Services will be held at 2 p. m. Monday in the Christian Church. Surviving are two children, John, Columbus, and Mrs. L. W. Friederich, Rochester, N, Y.
Fight Results
By United Press
NEW YORK-—(Long Beach Stadium)-— Billy Graham, 138%; York, oute
deadline for the second week.
LIDO LINES—If you wonder what makes a Venetian blind, consider this display of what little there is to the latest Ital
ian beach wear. The bl Ande
white-striped, modified./diapermodel swim suit was shown at a fashion show at Venice's Lide beach.
Agree on Steel
Wage Increase
PITTSBURGH, July 17 (UP)— The CIO United Steelworkers and Bethlehem Steel Corp. today announced agreement on the “big steel” pattern wage increases for 65,000 employees. The ent was identical with the U., 8. Steel Corp. contract which granted a 13 cent average hourly increase to 170.000 employees. The settlement was announced jointly by ClO-UBW President
‘| Philip Murray and J. M. Larkin,
vice president in charge of industrial public relations for Beth lehem. " The other major steel companies, employing more than 500,« 000 basic steelworkers, also were falling in line with the third round pattern and agreements are expected to be signed next week. Among them were Republic, Jones & Laughlin, AlleghenyLudlum, Pittsburgh and Youngstown Sheet & Tube Co.
Hershey Named Again As Draft Director
WASHINGTON, July 17 (UP) —President Truman today appointed Maj. Gen. Lewis B. Hershey as the nation's new draft director—a job he held during World War IL Gen. Hershey, a native of Indiana, has been director of the “stand-by” office of Selective Service records since June, 1047, He was given the task of helping build the armed services to a peacetime strength of 2,005,882 men. . Gen. Hershey's appointment is subject to Senate confirmation and probably will be submitted during the special session start
man Construction, John Madden won two from Naval Ordnance.
patients. :
, Ne Jointed Maxie Starr, 139, Baltimore,
TWO FOR ONE—Sally Amn Johnson, 24-year-old N successful careers. During the day, at left, she makes a lovely picture as she holds down a job as a model. She also works as a nurse on the midnightito-eight shift in the maternity ward of Woman's Hospital, right, hi to the wants of the tiny
ing July 26.
Ty
ew Yorker, combines two
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