Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 13 June 1941 — Page 14
"By Ohio Bat
‘CLEVELAND, June 13 (U. P).—
state Parole: Officer- M. J. Hanchin}
récommended today that Paul Mar-
tin, President of the Dies Casting # Union’ (C. IL. 0.) local which struck|
for: three days this week at the
Aluminum Co. of America plant} here, t be returned to prison to com-|. |
plete-a- term for armed: robbery.
Martin was held at the city dail] He will
on: -Mr. ~Hanchin’s order. *
remain in:wtktody until next month al
“Ohio: ‘Peniten Faving state without permission :to before the National Sto os ‘Washington last - week. ..Maitin’s parole is due. to expire next Oct. 21. Martin, -who' was" said to -have{" tsea the name Paul Mehringer, was _péroled -in August, 193. © He: or J been-sérving a: 10° to 25-year term} for a grocery robbery here in May, 1931. Before that he had been paroled once and convicted once for automobile theft.
ediation Board in :
+ Two good reasons : for calling va Gabor - (above), “Golden Gypsy” are_her honey hair. and, because Hungarian gypsies taught her to dance, Hollywood is now teaching her to act so youw’ll be seeing her in the movies.
ier r Fea E NR
CI al I
-white.
summer]
TRE ENR Ee a # '
omy «a
In those flattering smoketones « . « just as complimentary to. navy or brown as : ;
Hida. bis to throw Rattering shadow pi ietu res on your f face! First for
: Iwas one ‘of : the first to go: over to
> lader Denies He | je © Communist.
mo Special NEY J
ordinary clitzen ‘wonders how Communists get ‘control of ‘labor unions; | and why American workmen submit to such leadership. “Maybe ° the story of Alex Balint will throw some light on these ques~
ions. k ‘Alex’ ‘Balint was ‘the man behind the Fouehit Sue. ‘at the Cleveland plant . of Aluminum Co. of America.
him a Communist. . He denies it,
him well since 1935 say that he used 4 be open in’ affirming his membership iin the party and in urging others to join it. His ‘petition for citizenship, filed last September, says he was born in 1912 dt Nagy Gejocz, Hungary, and came to America in 1920. Ac-
gate ‘Balifit's alleged ‘Commu Sctivities. Charges “Frame-up” Little is‘’known here about Balint’s
witness . has sworn. he once told her, “I've been a Communist since I was 14, when I pulled by first strike in the Georgia cotton fields.” Records’ show thats he served 13 months in the 1929-30, ‘on: a charge of automobile theft. He says he was the victim of a frame-up. Only once’ in his. Cleveland labor career was. he. chosen. for & union
Corrigan-McKinney steel mills. He was. then’ only '28, but in addition to broads: : shoulders he ‘had. unusual
an audience. . He was.a talker.
: ¢ would make ‘a’ good spokesman.
But. Balint was, in principle; no ion man.” The representation=plan job, as events soon proved, was only a means to an end.
2" Joined €. 1 0. Early
organizing the steel workers. Balint
Citta Aluminum a
‘CLEVELAND, June 13 ~Many an’
“The §oth anniversary |
‘wedding “will be. celebrated Suns day by. Mr. and Mrs. ‘William Ward at’ their home, 3433 Central ‘Ave. Apt, 20 A family dinner
will be: followed by open house Roines are ‘expected to be present
The Dies Committee calls a cel but, Clevelanders who have known| War
S6Wiit 8 siMonga, apeiriais end of oy will be the speaker
cond Reformed and ge Church, Pleasant and’ Shelby | “Members of the 1916 club, who are celebrating their 25th “year in
at the banquet as well as new mems bers of the 1941. class who will be inducted {into the organization that night. The: winner of the first’ scholars
ET ae Mazion F. Clarke. completed. 48 years: of continuous
is ‘president of the club,
tract slongFall Creek
The iscene: 8
Camp <|un-~gi, rich in tradition anc io h- wil lore, where Scouts will make their)! 1 jay [home during ‘the Amps Six wo‘periods.
week:
floors. The dining hall and kitchen has all modern conveniences, including an electric range. There is a’ swimming pool and: a fleet of Samioes and rowboats. a climax to a. sive the ihe period period will companionship, * memora experiences exploration land Lr ender opporilie 10 We
Those: who attend . will. take, ‘th
- Scouts will sleep m screened-in| cabins and tents, all with wooden]...
Loeal dostots. will mske frequeit) Th checks of : fhe camp 1 a -to see Savio
year of Scout|°™®
tion and water will tbe: Diocesan: wa frequently. The i ee h iba: wniged]
‘both the Illinois Central and the’
tion on this petition has been de-|. layed while Federal agents investi- ;
life before he came to Cleveland in |§ the early 1030s. A Dies Committee |§
In 1935 he was a ‘rank-and-file (§ worker himself, “a ‘chipper in ‘the|{
ability to- think ‘on his. feet" before
His fellow workers in ‘the chip-i:
+. speech= ‘making - qualities in} orie so young and so tough, thought|
${ They "elected ‘him to office in the: : Oe ia representation plan. at ‘BC =McKinney.
The:C. 150: came along; bent on :
the €.. I..O. crowd, and he took a
lot of the company-union members| ‘with him. He became a crack or-
“Steel - Workers
% Shuler. By 1936 he was
summer" long! Grand companions on
a 8 vedio.
mittee, and in 1937 he was & he : violent “little: steel
ac however; he got] "He iwas fired ‘as an 8
Industrial council,
agent for:Local 217 of the United Automobile. Workers.
yi 1k help . from an’ in-|t 2 i fifend, A.” E. Stevenson, | y; since 1939 of the C. I. O/s|{
de had come from Detroit to Cleveland in 1937 to be business|
Stevenson, |
Dies :Conmniittee as a Co Stévenson a
rectof Of 4 the WPA 2 WPA Workerp $ Union.
women’ aso! workers. of WPA, testified before the Dies committee at Washington this week:that
persuade her: and other members to join: the! Communists. “He Iwas ‘always calling me‘ rade,” she says. “He figured that: I joined!the party, the:others would |# follow., Italways: Tefused; and he. always got: had. fou ia
‘Went ‘Over: ‘to tw
But before long Balint and two other former S. W. O. C.. organ-
in the “red purge” after the- Little Steel strike, were assigned to another work. They were organizers
Lewis’ United Mine Workers.
minum industry—and again, not as
tive of the workers, but as an appointed organizer. Soon he was retional Diecasters Association, and this week’s Al strike - which threatened, according to war de-
pé@tment officials, to bring producbale of miliary aircraft “to a dead
PREDICT GLASS USED FOR TIRES, BRIDGES
By Science Service WASHINGTON, D. C., June 13— With tires containing glass you may be driving over bridges made partly of glass a few years from now. | New super-highways, Pennsylvania Turnpike, which make possible stistained speeds of as much as 76 miles per hour, may result in a new kind of tire. Already experiments are being. made with thin, light tires, especially adapted for Buch use, - Older tires, with. their heavy tread, are torn apart Sg centrifugal force; Glass, as well as
steel and other materials, 3% being ve
| tried for tire
also, has" been’ denounced: by- thes
Balint immediately began: trying: tof;
izers, who had been fired with him
in the chemical division of John L.[f = Next, Balint appeared in the alu-{&
gional director of the C. I. Os Na-| it was in this position that he led|f
service with that company November, 1938. He was freight agent here 32 years, representing
Nigel el Pigte the last 16 years. of
Te aor one son, Lewis Ott. Ward of Muncie, and two grand-: sons,
inted Balint. als i
4 a
a worker or an. elected representa-|#
{This for Less Than the Price of
the Silverware Alone!
treasurer, ‘quet chairman.
FISHERMEN SET GOAL PETIT DE GRAT, N, 8, (U. PX —Five hundred ‘tho usand pounds of fish a month is the production: set by 92 fishermen of “this SOY. >
ay a han Mstees ‘Eugenes Beard is ‘bane
addition to their pment, four pairs of soc une sapmint) just in case the nights get a bit}.
books, cameras, ete. -
| physical * examination - not more
ttle|than: two weeks before. ung
chilly, an extra pair of shoes, note- i) All Scouts must have a complete
Camp Chank-tun-un-gi. The re-|4
camp. # » ;
| treat will last until Sunday.
oh
Fites Vs
CE TG Es
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