Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 19 August 1946 — Page 2
§ i
unist
Pi ns for Penetrating Into. Transportation Revealed
# By FREDERICK WOLTMAN ; BY FREY vert Stat Writer NEW YORK, Aug. 19.—The rail-imaritime strike.
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THE INDIANAP
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_ MONDAY, AUG. 19, 1948
Party Getting Set To Invade Railroad Unions
industry is next on the agenda says, “the president of our nation|y... teday.
; the Communist party, the New ignored the’ just demands of the Sel He had no word of criticism for the
snoouraged by the disruptive 48- profit-greedy Tall barons.”
national rail strike last May,
oh trate flroad | 3 gs: ot Re Ihe In their Wanted the same. sto: goes on, n tory and cary its message of iin advance for an all-out struggle tive trade union body in America.
time unity.” ‘Scrapping the Railway Labor act |
Hence, “the rail unions must find
b h command. Another is to unite ecent.day monopolists.” , similar to the committee cation the railroads want to de-
the dominant figure dealing with for years. Compared to Soviet
Harry in all C. 1. O. waterfront unions. x Economic action “must be coupled
» Party Goals Outlined |
ey A
This for | poli x : waa was disclosed when tinued the link “editorial. “The C. ‘the: World-Telegram obtained one I. O. works through R. A. C. We of the first copies of & new Com- |too must set up independent po-
{lroad Work-| litical action. . .." Ra 1946,| Railroad workers Link also man-!
3 - published _lages to inject the usual amount of! ane bifhed at. vations) Com | Comnfunist party Russia first prop- § 3 3 1°}: No. } aganda. Thus, another editorial, | "The masthead of Vol. 1, NO. © .p.,00 and the Railroaders,” likens | designates Link as official oraan! | vse railroad strikers to the Soviet committee, COMMUNISL \ |
i | party of New York.” | “Capitalist profit-hunger.” “cap-|
"Under the headline, “Offer Com- |, list rivalries” and “capitalist fear | munist R. R. Program, Link su of democracy” were “at the bottom | lines the party's recently = Mop t of world. war IL” says a third edi-| ET Indeperdery torial entitied “War and Capital- | workers, along the lines of C. ! or The Communists’ new railroad (P. A, C, greater A. P. of L.-C. T workers’ paper is looking for an-| R. R. brotherhood unity and N8~ ,p.. pame “Name the baby, win | tionalisation of the roads. =~ 4 prise” Link tells its readers. | HETwenty-one un the 21 ail “The winner will get $5 worth of | party's new slogan for the 21 IAT yeu pier books.” fn '’ Lessons to Be Learned | . | his progressive newspaper.” de- You'll Miss | | |
a one greeting by Wil- . Ges DE Communist party Your Friends : chairman, “should receive the full . support of railroad workers as it will raise, will face, and will help solve the urgent problems of one ‘and a half million workers on the railroads.”
while you are away on vacation . . . but you don't have to miss a single local or national news story during these exciting days . . . if you choose one of The Times popular plans for vacationers.
oe We'll gladly mail you your Times anywhere in the United States or Canada or your carrier will be glad to save your papers at the station and deliver them in
#Im Link, continues Mr. Foster, «lessons are also to be learned from the workers of other lands in which monopoly’s stranglehold on railroads and industries has been broken, as in Czechoslovakia, Yugoslavia and other new European
democracies. » * «rhe Link’ should also describe the conditions of life and work of one neat bundle on the day | the railroad workers of the Soviet you return. The youngsters plished socialism, . ow! they ‘won't. miss. a single day with their" favorite" comics. :
® Make arrangements for
operating the mines, mills and rail"roads of their country.” : ‘Headlines and Editorials | Here are some sample headlines: *“Railroaders Demand “Action On Grievance Log-Jam,” “What Work-| {ers Unity Won in Fur Industry” | and “Flash! Rail Exec Kicks About i Wall St. Control.” {The lead-off editorial, “two strikes -
rier when he collects week, or call RI-ley 5551 and ask for Circulation— right now while you think of it. &
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TWO KILLED AS BUS | CRASHES ON CURVE
1 . > PITTSFIELD, Ill, 'R a Pp i t P.).—Robert Livingstone * ) 3. ; In New e u Ica ion driver of & Greyhound bus which —two results” contrasts the May overturned near ‘here
rail strike with the June C. I. O.|night, killing two and injuring 35 In the former, itjn,reons was held without charge
: Livingstone, who was treated for 4k World-Telegram reported to-|workers. He waved the big stick minor injuries, was expected to be of scab use of the army ANC NAVY.|,ejaageq without bond. Mrs. Margaret Lundmark, 25, Bufik : siokis alo, N. Y., died of internal injuries |" But the striking seamens ur : f the. accident. Communist party has set WP knew what they wanted and all a he - The edfione killed instantly. Her husband and They prepared mon two small children were injured. 0St conserva- The bus, en route from Kansas to the m |... through the,committee for mari- | oo AG Veli oo “overturned while | S88 : rounding a sharp curve. 24% x = wid Senator. Claghorn should have warned these Dixie belles against the coldness of the North, Peggy Brooks, left, and Catherine Cox, both from Memphis, Tenn. that is, braved Lake Michigan's chilly
waters at a Chicago beach, They scrammed out before they got very pti ; These were Lulu Schentk, 63,|, for maritiine unity, which made stroy the unions they have been| oC Th. bike Bugg, 50, Win- wet. chester, Ill, and Margaret Hebensberger, Chicago, Others hospitalized included
" persons still one aim of a railroad propaganda, path to unity”. in order to cope hospitalized. The hospital did not mapped out bythe Party's with the modern union-busting of| Clo," "orient of their injuries ¥ S | but said that three were in serious the nation's 21 railroad unions Info|" There has never been any INCL oonqypion,
Aug. 19 (U.| Chicago,
Saturday
Mrs. Pittsfield, was
were
Dixie Belles Brave Chilly Lake
GETS POST AT BUTLER
T director of the reading clinic at Miss Ruby Junge has been named | Butler university, President M. O. poring into rail with united political “action,” con-| saron Hoskins, 46, Kingsbury, Ind. assistant professor of education and | Ross announced.
FIND 2 GIRLS DEAD, ESCORTS MISSING
CHARLESTON, 8. C,, Aug. 19 (U. P.).—The bodies of two young women, missing with their dates since leaving Charleston last Tues‘day night in a small sailboat, were returned here last night aboard a coast guard cutter, . The bathing suit-clad bodies of Betty Stucken and Peggy Burk, both 18, were found yesterday where they had apparently washed ashore on Otter isl 35 miles southeast of here. No" trace was found of their young companions, Jimmy Byrmestér, 21, and Tommy Condon, 20, alsoof Charleston. Its mast shorn at boat level the boat in which the two couples: had sailed for a moonlight picnic on Sullivan's island, was found capsized on the beach a mile and a half from the bodies, An official theorized that the two girls had clung to the boat for many hours.
10 MILLION FISH EGGS
single codfish may contain 10,000,000 eggs.
Report 2000 Slain as Finda, Moslem Rioting Dies Down
CALCUTTA, Aug. 19 (U. P.).— facilities were overtaxed. Uncollected The death toll in three days of riot- |garbage’ accumulated, and there ing between Hindus and Moslems in (was a threat of small pox and the Calcutta streets was estimated | cholera, : : between 2000 and 3000 today. The| A few shops and restaurants Frenzy apparently had passed, and | reopened Sunday night under mili= the city moved slowly toward nor- tary protection, easing slightly the mal. s : food shortage aggravated by the The British-owned newspaper, |forced commercial shutdown during The Statesman, which was attacked |the riots. | rby a mob early in the three-day| Authorities were removing to rioting, published the 2000-3000 (eyazuee camps groups of Hindus death estimate. It sald the injured and Moslems living in communities numbered many thousand, Other dominated by the opposite religious sources estimated 4000 hurt. body. ; Piles of corpses still cluttered the| More than 1200 fire alarms were streets, but mass fighting had dwin- sounded during the three days. dled to sporadic clashes and fires.
British troops, shooting when 5 KILLED, 24 HURT De tent yenurasy. 1 vi| IN BUS-AUTO CRASH
under control yesterday. - It will take several days before complete! OLD ORCHARD, Me, Aug. 19 (U, calm is enforced. . P.).—Five persons were killed and A government statement empha-|24 injured last night when an auto sized the difficulties involved in |mobile collided head-on with a bus disposing of hundreds of corpses on a curve near here.
left in streets, rivers and ponds| - Police said 11 persons, six adults
WASHINGTON-—The roe of alas fighting spurted through the'!and five children were riding in
eity, * the automobile. None ‘of the bus Hospital and emergency feeding | passengers were injured seriously.
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