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Tenn.: "My son was killed In the Johnston Steward Wife war. The Army says that his death Belgians Sind Mrs. Patch Wage Increases Won, was due to his own misconduct and Draftees' and Veterans' Guide was not in line of duty. Does that Tropez, Grenoble, Hagenau Forest,] File Divorce Actions Diamond-Studded Saber Colmar, and Stroehl,! -By Maj. Thomas M. Nial- mean I cannot receive my compen- Nuernberg Phone Workers Told Two separate divorce actions In- sation from the VA?” By the Associated Press where Leopold was freed. Questions and answers: some time between October 8, 1940, MACHINE 0ESI8N Yes, I’m afraid it unless The King is In Switzerland. volving Mrs. Betty Ann Stewart, Prom Mrs. G. T. P., Oklahoma and September 2, 1945. does, you BRUSSELS, Sept. 17.—A group of can prove the Army wrong. The Short Specialised Cemrse 1815 Seventeenth street N.W., and City: “I am the dependent parent 2. You must pass a physical exam. Belgian* took to the American Em- To Remain on Job law says that a widow or a depend- Enroll Now for CIsooco Forming hi her Johnston Fraser of a serviceman who was killed in Then you can take up to $10,000 an Inscribed husband, Stew- ent parent or children of a de- bassy yesterday saber, Columbia Technical By tht Associated Press the war. My compensation is $54 a worth of NSLI. art, are pending in District Court. ceased veteran can only be eligible set with diamonds and rubies, as a , Sept. 17.—About month. Will it be raised to $60. as Institute as for compensation if the veteran gift to Mrs. Alexander Patch. 25.000 telephone workers who had Mr. Stewart, who is employed you stated in your column, and if Prom D P. L., Morgantown, Va.: died or was killed “in line of duty.” GERMAN Her late Lt. 1239 Vermont Ave. N.W. been poised for a strike this morning a member of the Senate and so, when?” "I read where you said that wives husband, the Gen. From Associated Press liewsfeatures.) it if you remain a de- of discharged veterans Alexander Patch, rescued ME. 5626 were told to stay on the job after a House Joint Committee on Labor- Yes, will, honorably jr„ King FRENCN-SPAIUSH Catalogue* The Berlin Method !» Available Onlt at settlement was reached them pendent parent. The increase went are entitled to burial in a national Leopold III from the Nazis with his giving trHF. BERLITZ SCHOOL Of LANGUAGES Veteran A Derated Management Relations, brought But said can 7th an average pay increase of about into effect September 1, which cemetery. you they Hitler's Dentist Army. s:t» 17th St. (at Ere). NAtional Guilty TRAINING $4 40 weekly. suit August 31 charging Mrs. Stew- means you won’t notice it until your be buried in a “separate plot” and The saber inscription reads: Approved tor Gl VETERAN Isn't that NUERNBERG. Sept. The strike would have affected art with misconduct and naming a September check arrives at the end “beside” their husbands. Germany, "To the memory of Lt. Gen. Alex- service in most of of the month. something new? It's my opinion 17 Kansas City: "I Duplicate Police Testing Machine an hour, or $46 a week. and attempted to respond when he RE6ISTER NOW took out worth of NSLI Union Is “Not Satisfied.” asked her to raise her hand. only $5,000 • Conversation and Writing ! when in the service. Would there • For Foreign Service Philip Murray, CIO president, and She was unable to talk, however, • For College Examinations be to increase that to the Stanley Bracken, Western Electric and her condition remained critical. any way • Commercial Spanish maximum $10,000?” • Spanish Shorthand president, participated in the nego- Miss Johnson suffered severe brain tiations here which were climaxed injuries September 6 in her apart- Sure, yo\i can do that. Go to any SANZ SPANISH SCHOOL 1128 Conn. In. RE. 1013 an session when a hair i VA office. Two by all-night Wednesday ment, apparently heavy things, though: 10th Yoor In Wn.hintton night. dryer fell on her. I 1. You must have had service Mr. Weaver said the union was "not satisfied with this settlement, even though it is, to our knowledge, the best made by any Bell System Co.” He said the strike call was post- poned indefinitely, adding that he felt a strike at this time to improve the terms would not be "worth while.” "We were the only union in the telephone Industry that put up a fight this year.” he said, "and we did that, at heavy expense to our union, against the whole Bell System.” Extends Pact Into 1950. The union originally asked a 81- eent hourly increase. The company made no immediate comment on the agreement. The new pact extends the contract to November 30, 1950, but gives the union the right to reopen the con- tract on wages after September 15, 1949, and the further right to strike if agreement is not reached in such a reopening, Mr. Weaver said. Negotiations were conducted here and in Chicago under a previous wage reopening clause of the con- tract. 4 The settlement does not cover 25,000 long distance telephone workers, whose union, the CIO American Union of Telephone Workers, on Wednesday resumed wage talks here with the AT&T. Southwestern Phone Union x Rejects Offer, Ends Parleys It takes nerve! But we've proved again ST. LOUIS, Sept. 17 {/P).—Union negotiators rejected an offer from and that it works swell for everyone. the Southwestern Bell Telephone again Co. yesterday and bargaining talks affecting 50,000 employes In five You a break—and so do we! States were broken off. get Frank P. Lonergan, vice president of Southwestern 20, Com- munications Workers of America, said the offer was “ridiculous and insulting" and he announced a strike vote would be taken "in the near future.” Step into your Bond store, The company and the union had two sessions yesterday with a Fed- eral conciliator, at his request. It ask for one of our popular Style Manor Suits. was the first time they had been f ”w’.\ together since July. Negotiation for ; and see the same smooth a new contract covering wages and you'll worsteds,%the working conditions had been going on intermittently since April. 4* same fine needlework—and the same familiar A Southwestern Bell spokesman % aaid the company had nothing to say about yesterday’s meeting, ex- price tag 37.75. cept that it was arranged at the • on request of the conciliator. • • and how it shrinks ! Butter the gold The union official said Southwest- ern Bell offered no wage raise in standard. Beefsteak a dollar a bite. No, the on our famous Park Lane the smaller cities and towns and Set your sights offered raises ranging from $1 to S3 weekly in the larger cities-—the $3 old green buck ain’t what it used to be. That find America's top to apply in St. Louis. Alto- Quality, and you'll topflight gether, he added, the increase would average 3.5 to 4 cents an hour. is, until you walk into Bond’s. And right fabrics handsomely tailored in 81 different Institute Vision-Testing there, you’ll start singing a happier tune! sizes and models—at one low price you paid last Planned Here in January A vision-testing Institute, consist- ing of eight free public lectures next January, is being arranged by the District Society for the Prevention we’re whacky. of Blindness, Executive Director Some folks insist Helen Curtis Demary announced today. tell you that when costs go Planned especially for nurses, They’ll teachers and parents, the Institute hand- lectures on the four of to that". Decide want the luxury and fine Thursdays up, the public must pay. We say "nuts you January from 4 to 6 p.m. will in- clude elementary lectures on eye of our Rochester fashioned Executive structure, common eye diseases and detailing good eye habits. it this Fine worsteds— Vision testing techniques will be We figure way. Group Suits, and we'll show you a grand selec- demonstrated. Several ophthalmologists will assist in the us we’ll ever show an - Inez E. the only kind you—cost program, w’ith Dr. Wilber tion at a price you'll recall with pleasure as institute committee chairman. The institute w'ill be held in the of 50 cents a yard more. Bond needle- Natiqnal Museum Auditorium, Con- average stitution avenue at Tenth street N W. workers draw more • BUT-- The District society was to meet this afternoon in its offices at 839 our suit Seventeenth street N.W. It will instead of boosting discuss plans for participation in the health exhibit of the annual * public we ve decidt t tight, scientific assembly of the District prices, ! The Medical Society September 27, 28 That's "the Bond way". Mr. Phipps way and 29. get more business—- -1 bigger America's largest outfitter to men again puts CASH OR CREDIT volume rub out a big chunk of our increased 16 to II MontKi* new life into your rapidly shrinking green- costs. Instead of selling a hundred suits, backs. We think you'll agree that it majc.es we’ll hold the line, try to sell two hundred Photo Si Dirk Room Supplies sense! Movie Equipment —and beat the rise that WarW Known Mak«w—* aialug Knot way. Hiffcrwl Tratir-ln Allowance TKo CootpWtt fKoto Dooortofwt Voo Brtnntrto Photo Co. uiNikunM. iiw open » to 6 P.M. (n—m ft— Jtoa. Mini >«t -

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