“Strikers Are Going Back,” Windsor Star. May 12, 1942. Page 11.
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Dumart’s Employes Decide to Return After Protest
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KITCHENER, May 12. Employes of Dumart’s Limited decided at a mass meeting last night to return to work today after 290 workers had walked out in mid-afternoon in protest against the management's refusal to arbitrate the dismissal of two employes for insubordination.
TO MEET COMMITTEE
The decision followed the announcement that the meat packing company had decided to meet the employes committee and the civic industrial disputes committee this afternoon.
The two men, employed in the cutting department, had a dispute with the foreman. The management claimed ‘insubordination.’
Fred Dowling of the Packing House Workers Organization Committee, a Congress of Industrial Organization affiliate, declared:
There is no doubt in our minds but what the company is out to smash the union and used these two employes as the goats.
A company statement before the walkout said the two were dismissed for gross insubordination to their foreman." The company said that this insubordination occurred within sight of the plant superintendent and the general superintendent.
NEITHER PROTESTED
‘Neither employe protested their dismissal nor have they made representations for reconsideration of these cases, although our employes agreement provides that they could do so in writing within two days of dismissal.”
The vote to return to work came after Frank Ainsborough, conciliation officer for the federal labor department, who arrived in the city an hour after the walkout, announced the company’s agreement to meet the two committees.
While admitting that the workers really desired that only the three-man executive of the 12-man committee represent them, both Major Joseph Meinzinger and Ainsborough urged that the workers accept.
The conciliation officer and Dowling will attend the meeting also.
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Let's delude ourselves and imagine that this is actually a post credit scene where Aziraphale rethought his decision, stopped the elevator, apologised to Crowley and now they are packing their belongings to their Bentley to move together to their South Downs cottage and live happily ever after.
This pack contains 14 unlocked plants from the Horse Ranch pack!
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Image description: art showing a giant snail approching an anthromorphic racoon, two anthromorphic mice and an anthromorphic squirrel waiting at a "snail stop". A mouse sits on the shell of the snail, the snail carries large bags. end Image description
“Prisoners-of-War Food Box Packing Plant Opened,” Windsor Star. October 9, 1942. Page 3.
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CANADA'S fourth prisoner-of-war food box packing plant held a preview this morning. It is at 456 Goyeau street in the former sales room of the General Motors Buick-Pontiac division. The Windsor plant is a model for the whole country, national and international, Red Cross authorities agreed when they saw it in action. Hundreds of Windsor women will work at the assembly lines in the big plant. The output will be 20,000 boxes per week; 20 tons of food will go into them. This brings Canada's output of boxes to 80,000 weekly. At top is a scene at the assembly line with Windsor women at the different jobs of placing one item each in the box. A specially constructed box holds just the right amount of food for a prisoner for one week. The boxes are packed much the same as a car is assembled in a big auto plant. Below, left to right, are: Mr. A. L. King, general manager of the plant: Mrs. Alan C. Prince, convener of the prisoners-of-war committee of the border branch, Canadian Red Cross, and Mr. Norman C. Urquhart, national chairman of the Red Cross prisoners-of-war committee, Ottawa. Visiting Red Cross officers were also here from Detroit.
(By Staff Photographer.)