Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 7 October 1938 — Page 4
‘PAGE 1¢
TOBIN SUGGESTS | Moror A, F. OF L.-C. l 0 FETE_——— MEDIATION PLAN
16,000 Thrown Out of Work In Dispute at Plym3 outh Plant. (Continued from Page One) | any other law ever placed on the statute books.” he argued He rec labors tn the hand thx biase and prejudiced” upreme Court that “We used to have.” President Roosevelts Supreme Court expansion legislation not but Mr Tobin nsed the pulse of the j approved the Wagner Act Mr. Tobin «
that legisiation
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e delegates the Indiana Motor Traffic Associat vesterday at the Hotel Antlers parade through downtown streets
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elect officers
* 3 DIE, 34 SAVED IN FIRE AT SEA
oud Oil Tanker Explodes, Burns And Sinks Off Coast Of Florida.
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} f PORT EVERGLADES Fla, Oet. 7 ntion adjourn with (U.P) —The tanker O. M. Bernuth ¢coun- made for port today with 34 surfn vivors of the Standard Oil Co. tanky er E. J. Bullock, which exploded, burned and sank 25 miles east of Dry Tortugas yesterday evening with a loss of three men | Those lost were Thomas therd, boatswain, tin, seaman, wno were Killed presumably by the explosion in the for1 ward part of the ship, and V. L Shaves, chief cook, who died of injuries aboard a Coast Guard cutter speeding to Key West
2: 285,000 REGISTERED "AS DEADLINE NEARS
New voters registered for the Nov
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Claims 00.900 Unionists
Said
R election passed the 25000 mark
today with only three more days before the deadline Voters who fail to register or fail correct their registration after will not be eligible to vote
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_'the Briggs plant which CY Plymouth with bodies wag no labor trouble at the Briggs plant, but the company decided to close until production was resumed by Plymouth. Union officials insisted they were not on strike but merely refusing to TOrk more than 32 hours a week.
Lewis Expected To Speak Here
John L. Lewis, C. I. O. chairman, d 18 expected to come here late this ier month or early in November to address a state-wide C. I. O. rally, it was announced by James Robb, Indiana State Industrial Union Council president Two other high C. 1 are expected to come Indiana within the next few weeks, Mr Robb said. They are Philip Mur- _ ray, Steel Workers’ Organizing Committee chairman, and Sidney Hill man, Amalgamated Clothing Work|ers of America president Mr. Robb also announced that the {Indiana State Industrial Union { Council will open an extensive cam- | paign to organize workers in basic industries hare with a rally for steel and packing house workers Oct. 14 at 241 W. Marviand St
F. D. R. Considers
New Move for Peace
HYDE PARK, N. Y, Oct. T (U. P) President Roosevelt today studied a request that he initiate a study of labor condtions as a move toward conciliated differences between the A. F. of I. and C. I. O. EE a
Kirk's 51st Anniversary Sale—
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16,000 Out of Work in Plymouth Dispute DETROIT, Oct
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P) —ClosMo Car the Briggs Mack Ave. nue Body Plant in a La dispute today approximately 16,000 men 0 f work The refusal utomobile Workers Union members to g0 ta work at the Plymouth plant caused the Briggs shutdown. About 7000 were le e at the Plymouth Factory and were affected at
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were to hear committee reports this morning and s afternoon. At the luncheon yes=
Shep- | and Charles Aus-
| supplies |
‘Sensatio
i Celanese Rayon binding—
4 1 iN
215 WEST WASHINGTON ST.
ion, which openea staged a safety last night. They
president, spoke the safety
‘Arm Dead, but { Dean Wins
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Baking Co, Indianapolis unit, parade. entry won in the truck division.
THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
Traffic Delegates Hear Leader
TRUCK SAFETY WORK PRAISED
ICC Official Is Speaker at Convention; Asks Facts On 60-Hour Week.
H. H. Kelly, safety director of the (ICC Bureau of Motor Carriers, to{day lauded the Indiana Motor | Traffic Association for its effective ‘safety work among interstate track |operators. He spoke at a luncheon for delegates ot the seventh annual
| association convention at the Hotel
© | Antlers.
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Delegates to the seventh annual convention of ) terday Marvin Tucker, Association president (left) | and Ted V. Rogers, American Trucking Association
A float of the Kroger Grocery & won first award in
The Bowes Seal-Fast Corp.
Courage Lives, Heart of Nation
(Continued from Page One)
but nobody Knows more about | pitching The Cubs bought him from the St. { Louis Cardinals this year for 3185.«
{000; he was expected to win the| league flag for them and prove al
dominant force in the World Series. But his arm went bad. He pitched only three complete games all season, yet made a sensational comeback in stopping the leagueleading Pittsburgh Pirates in the first game of a vital series down the stretch. This encouraged hope that if the Cubs finally won the pennant in their league, which they did, of course, Dean might be able to duplicate this performance in at least
one game against the Yankees. Like!
Babe Ruth, Dean had always shown at his best In spotlight assignments. | The Pittsburgh triumph was proof enough. Maybe he'd be even better against the Yankees in the playefis
Watching Dean warm up the game you thought you catch him with your bare hands seemed he was just going through the motions of pitching. There was nothing on the ball. Once in awhile it took a puny little dip. But for the most part it was just straight soft ball pitching.
Only Three Innings?
hefore could It
i
You recalled you had predicted Dean wouldn't last three innings against the Yankee sluggers. That had been just a shot-in-the-dark prediction. Now you were pretty sure it would work out that way. Indeed, you sort of itched to get a {bat in your own hands and swing |against that Kind of pitching It really did look that simple. Well, the game started and Dean {found himself opposed by Gomez, who has been peculiarly
successful in World Series games. |
In the matter of stuff there was no comparison between the two pitchers. Gomez was a millionaire, Dean a pauper. One had everything, the other nothing. | But there was one important difference. When Dean let the ball £0 he knew where it was going. Dean pitched six innings in which only three men faced him. The Yankees got two of the cheapest runs ever scored in any World Series in the second inning. | This came about because of confusion on the part of the Cubs’ | third baseman and shortstop. They
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both tried to pick up the ball at the same time, collided violently, fell to the ground in awkward, scattered poses. The simple grounder went for two bases and let two runs in. Few World Series pitchers have ever had such a {rightful break go against them. It was a tribute to Dean's fierce competitive urge that the unholy break did not disturb him in the least. | He came back in the next inning and retired the Yankees one, two, |three. Indeed, there wasnt a {break in this orderly skein of frustration until the fateful eighth when Dean's ambitious bubble burst
i
around his large and fluttering ears. |
Taught Lefty a Lesson But in the meantime he was give ing Gomez a lesson in the higher art of pitching, He was doing so supremely better with nothing, than Gomez with practically everything it was an unfunny jest, Dean seemed to know more about the Yankee hitters than they Knew about themselves. He was giving them everything but what wanted
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they
As inning after inning rolled by |
and the Cubs led by 3-2, it became increasingly evident that this dead arm pitcher was in complete command of the ball game. Only one thing could possibly defeat him
His courage wouldn't run out on!
him, neither would his cunning. It was just a question of how long he could keep on going through the motions without becoming physically spent. In the end this is what whipped him,
i
|
tough alloys.
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T all started with “catwalk-cooling,” BM on the costly racing cars of Europe.
They were shooting at better aerodynamics, not new styling — but they touched off something that will re-pat-tern cars everywhere before it’s done.
Not that looks alone ever come first with Buick. What's really Buick is underneath all that, down deep in the good true metals, the split-hair precisions, the
But everyone goes for beauty, and you would be less than human if you didn't thrill to an eyeful of the smartest dressed automobile you ever saw.
23-25 W. North St.
training and selection of better | | drivers, close supervision of equip- |
[ment and study of causes of acci-|
dents. He also urged that the association] send facts on results of a 60-hour] week for truck operators to the ICO, | which will begin invetsigation of the hour regulation problem Nov. 4| in Chicago. | Committees were to report and | officers were to be elected this| afternoon. Walter Mvers, former]
] Speaker of the Indiana House of |
He said the association is out- | . !standing in the country for its]
{
Representatives, was to speak later today. John J. Caton, director of Chrys{ler Institute of Engineering, will speak at th® annual banquet closing the convention tonight.
Pastor Who GotNew Eye Speaks Here
The Rev. U. E. Harding, Portland, Ore, former Indiana district superintendent of the Nazarene Church, whose sight was restored recently by transplanting the cornea from the eye of a dead person for one of his is the guest of the Rev. H. J. Rahrar, pastor of the South Side Nazarene Church, and W. C. Harding, 1309 Shadeland Drive, his brother. He spoke last night at the church on “Whereas I Was Blind—Now I See.” The cornea of the eve of a woman, a former member of his Portland Church, was substituted for the blinded cornea of one of the Rev. Mi. Harding's eyes. A similar operation will be made on his other eye within six months, he said.
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FRIDAY, OCT. 7, 1938
yMESHROOMS OUT OF BOUNDS
JAILED 6 YEARSFOR MISUSING CITY KEY |, Toovas. Ontect, Oct 1 oe
| County this year. Frank Silcox pro=PROVIDENCE, R. I, Oct. 7 (U.) juced one more than two feet in
P.).—Marion Walker has started a! i : | circumference. six-year term in state prison, and; here's why: | He arrived at Warren with a card issued by the Veterans’ Ad-| ministration and was given a key to the city, entitling him to sleep in| the town hall. He used the key at| the home of Town Solicitor William | McSoley, however—and took $250 In}
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