Firstly, I'd caution you from opening up the sqlite files Core Data spits out and trying to infer things from them. It's meant to be an opaque format: you're only supposed to interact with Core Data persistent stores through the Core Data APIs.
However, to answer your question: in general in database design, you wouldn't use a linking table like you describe for a one-to-many relationship, only for a many-to-many. For a one-to-many, you'd have a foreign key field in the table at the 'one' end, and have the contents of that field be the primary key of another table. For example (sorry for the random example I found on Google):

tblOrder is in a one-to-many relationship with tblOrderDetails. This is implemented by having an Order# field in the to-many side of the relationship, which is a foreign key referring to the primary key of the tblOrder table. As you can see, no linking table is needed.
A many-to-many relationship would need a linking table, but a one-to-many does not.
One final point: I note in your screenshot that you don't have an inverse relationship set up for your works or customer relationships. Core Data requires all relationships to have an inverse, otherwise your data may become corrupted. (That's somewhat a simplification, since there are other ways to work around it, but in general making inverses is easiest.)