Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 17 October 1948 — Page 1
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placements. First Application
"he principle was not new but this was its first application, according to NLRB Chairman Paul
M. Herzog.
The board also applied a new principle. provided... the Taft Fs Hariley Lane Eames Mrmr had been replaced on their jobs == could not paggicipate in a collec-
tive bargaining ‘election.
It ruled 71 employees of the Pipe Machinery Co. of Cleveland who had refused to come back to work without the raises for which | they struck had “automatically” |
lost their jobs.
“If they .continue to persecute labor by going to the extremes of | the law,” Mr. Tobin said, “we will have more disturbances | which will injure both labor and capital and there will .be no ma-! =
chinery to adjust it.” Cites N.Y. Strike
“He pointed To the-reeentNew York truck strike which for a time threatened the food supply of the metropolis. In such a strike, unwanted by either ‘the, union or the employers and not ordered by the union, Mr. Tobin! said; machinery designed for] settling disputes between unions
and employers is snagged.
Part of the decision which came as a bombshell in the midst of the political campaign, Was pased on a policy that goes back
Eo Supreme pourt decision. on | N gis ANT NA i Tr In the early days of that law the court held in the Mackay| Radio case that the NLRB could not order reinstatement of an “economic” striker who had been! replaced and that the replace‘ment was entitled to keep the job.
Political Angle
From the political angle, the eee A spiston ~of - the. NLBE provided | new ammunition for union “leaders who contend the Taft-Hart-law was the death notice
ley of organized labor.
The Taft-Hartley law is the only domestic issue on which the presidential candidates have taken sharply opposing stands. ..}- President Truman has taken a firm stand for its repeal while Republican Thomas E. Dewey has indorsed it, saying that while it was not perfect it could be | changed when the need for
change arises.
Pony, Bike, but No
Love—Boy.Leaves |
MACON, Ga. Oct. 16 (UP)—| ‘A 14-year-old Ohio boy is find-y ing more loye in'a Georgia jail| than he got at home where he| had a pony and a bicycle, Paul Haverfield, juvenile probation
officer, said today.
When the boy was picked up on a Macon street corner three weeks ago he told police he had been driven away from his home
in Ohio by his father:
The boy has been detained in Bibb County jail since he was
found.
Mr. Haverfield said he is trying his best to help the youngster find a ‘home where he will be loved and cared for properly. He said] Ohio probation officers reported they do not intend to send for the "boy. When informed that their son was in Macon, Mr. Haverfield said the boy’s parents replied that . they did not want him and what's more they plan to sell his pony
and bicycle. -
Speeding Sedan Outdistances Police
Roaring through Ben Davis at| Killens an. hour. Aq... sedan was chased and lost by! State. polite last night. “ » State troopers’ Safd “they fest: sighted the car which was going - east on U. 8 40, as it sped through town. They took up the chase, and sald the-fugitive-ma-, chine at times reached a speed | exceeding 100 miles per hour. The| vehicle quickly out-distanced the
troopers.
Identifies ‘The Hushes'
To Win $7000 in Prizes
HOLLYWOOD, Oct. 16 (UP) It took Mrs. Robert Learman, St. Louis, Mo. housewife just one telephone call and a jingle tonight to identify playwright Moss: Hart and Actress Kitty Carlisle as "Mr. and Mrs. Hush" on the first night of Ralph Edwards’ '%ruth or Consequence radio pro-
gram contest.
_ Mrs, Learman will receive about $7000 in prizes. Last year the, contest stretched for eight weeks..
?
59th YEAR--NUMBER 189 . '°
Tobin Scores NIRB Ruling ~ On Dismissals
Calls Finding a Blow To Mediation Setup |
Newest NLRB ruling under the Taft-Hartley law threatens a new kind of labor disturbance which may make present strike settlement machinery obsolete, Presi-| dent Daniel J. Tobin of the Teamsters Union said last night. | He referred particularly to la-| bor disputes in which a strike is not called by a union. but is spen-| taneous, leaving neither a union . nor management responsible. Nub of the NLRB ruling, handed down yesterday in an eight months’ old Cleveland machinists’ strike, was that workers who strike for higher wages automatically loge their jobs when the employer hires “permaneat” re-
Photo by Victor Peterson, T'mes Staff Photographer.
CAN ANYONE HELP?—Shortage of nurses in Indianapolis hospitals is so critical that hundred: of residents cannot be hospitalized because of lack of nursing are. The need is so desperate that tha new $170:000 28-bed contagious disease’ unit at Indiana University Medical Center—to be completed within two weeks-~—cap-not be opened unless nurses can be obtained. The plea for help that is in the hearts of hospital officials is portrayed on the face of “Jackie,” a 3-year-old patient at General, “| need 2 nurse . . "
It is usually possible to measure the political, cultural and economic vitality of any American city by the quality of its newspapers. For this reason the quality of a city’s journalism becomes a matter of general public interest. The spirit of Indianapolis is definitely metropolitan.
these interests are entitled to a voice, for which the newspapers are the recognized sounding boards. Once its integrity has been demonstrated and accepted, the role of a newspaper and its effect on the life of ‘a community becomes a matter of public concern. Nothing directs this force along the lines of public service so effectively as clean and vigorous competition. That appreciation of this fact is general in Indianapolis has been demonstrated over the past few weeks. This demonstration has been evident in the widespread requests, and even demands, that The Indianapolis Times extend its activity to include a Sunday newspaper. * Those expressions have come from public-spirited leaders with no personal or material interests to serve. They have also come from leading advertisers. These
‘meéfchants have a vital stake in the maintenance of
channels of approach to public purchasing power. The public's faith in the honesty and integrity of a newspaper is reflected in the advertising it carries. We have felt that during the 25 years of its operation by Secripps-Howard the roots of The Indianapolis Times have sunk deep into the life of this community. We are proud of the evidence of Hoosier faith in The Times and the expressed desire that we play a larger role in the progress of the city and the state. In responding to the demand for a Sunday newspaper it will be our purpose to add something to the week-end life of the community. We will try to make the addition alert, informative and challenging. The serious news of the hour will be covered, but we will not forget that even in times of great crisis the American reader will accept no rationing of life, love, or laughter. This first Sunday edition has been produced in eramped-quarters.with limited mechanical facilities. To the extent that it falls short of our aims we ask your indulgence. Plans have been drawn to double our present pace; to greatly increase our press capacity..and mechanical facilities, and to speed up production. These
improvements will” bé pushed ws: rapidly-as. construc.
tion handicaps and shortages will permit. Meanwhile we will strive for an even greater measiiré of public approval: ‘Our-effort-will-be based on the paper's editorial appeal and upon our success in meeting the news and entertainment desires of the city and state in which we are proud to play a part. . THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES Roy W. Howard, President Walter Leckrone, Editor
Henry W. Manz, Business Manager | ; ——— Other Features on Inside Pages | Amusements +.....i00000 046, ATIMOVIES - ssnsnsisssssssnsessdb, |
Eddie ASh «ivvvevevisvassece DOPOUES cosenncrserrcneiiin BAIRAMO +vsornvresssnnnesssses 44
Notice Heads Foundation
Because of space limita-
ithe first “real’’ winter.”
4
SUNDAY, OCTOBER 17, 1948
Nedehee a Senator
FORECAST: Cloudy, windy and much cooler today. ' Light to moderate frost tonight. Low tonight, 30-32, high today, 50.
En Second-Ol i Hy as Matisr: at Postofioy
agner
¥
Freeze to Ride
Crest of Cold
During Night
Killing Frosts Also Predicted
Freezing temperatures riding
the crest of a cold air mass were iexpected to send the mercury] skidding down to 30, late tonight. |
The rain and thunderstorm
{which soaked Indianapolis and {Marion County yesterday, was
jexpected to be the harbinger of cold spap of the
dy, windy and much cooler, huis
to strike central Indiana about 4:30 p. m. The cold air mass fol-
mid-West,” the weatherman said. The high temperature for today was expected to reach 50 degrees, with the mercury nosediving sometime before midnight.
Freezes and Frosts
hinder crops. -
OWE RK EAR RET = oC ' Te Our Readers: —— -
CHAMPAIGN, Il, Oct. 16 (UP) The University of Illinois Foundatons imposed’ bY De® | (ion today appointed Willam But: Businens ..........::.-: 53-37 Scherrer iLL iiiiiiniiiuse sary to o it approxima ly terfield, vice president of DePauw classified Ct Caasnas Ty mit app ¥ University, as {ts new manager.
ing out the kernels.
TT Bit Wotorists as -far-south-as: orthern Illinois were warned to| iput anti-freeze in their automobile?
radiators tonight.
ers-aaid. Roh BERT bn singers Satie
Decage of Fam _ Prosperity Seen
Bust Fear Unfounded, {8
The interests and ideas of our people are extremely df= Says GOP. Legislator. verse. They will continue to become more so. All of
By GEORGE E. REEDY JR. United Press Staff Correspondent WASHINGTON, Oct. 16—Chair{man Clifford R. Hope (R. Kas.), lof ‘the House Agriculture Com-
Imittee, said today that American) {farmers can look forward to a
jdecade of prosperity,
|" “Farm prices won't be as high | lag they were in the war years,”| he said. “but they will still be
{pretty good prices.”
| He cautioned, however, that] {agricultural prosperity depends
upon full industrial employment.
{He pointed out that the farmer {must sell most of his products
[te city workers.
| Hope said that in tours of agricultural regions he has found|
{many farmers afraid of a “bus€”| {He said he believes their fears
unfounded. Surpluses Drained Off
| The program for feeding Eu-| {rope is now draining off crop sur-| {pluses that might ordinarily send! |prices down, he said. When that {program ends he explained, the {“slack” can be taken up by grow-
ling different types of food.
cattle.
about his markets.”
On Inside ‘Pages
Dewey to avoid break in foreign policy . . . pictures foc of -Indiana.appearance, additional polities... .. Page : " »
|
.'n =
| - ; : News from around the world . . . photos of Butler y “+ ” - and “Indiana” ‘Homecoming “queens. VE Een | .
ANSARI): Bosh
of the day. A cold front was due |
lowing, will affect the “entire
Hard freezes and killing frosts were forecast for much of the Midwest, but experts said the] weather would help rather than
They said frosts would particularly benefit the corn cyop by dry-
Cold air moving down from! Canada had pushed the temperature down to 18 above at Dickison, N. D., yesterday. Scattered {snow flurries were forecast for the| ‘lupper Great Lakes today and [Monday. The cold front will move across fe Ohio River Valley tonight and reach the East Coast tomorrow,
[foreca
Feared Amnes
Find Mexicans ‘Treated Like Cattle’ Boar ds Tr ain !
health officer. :
SACRIFICE — Young Mexicans like Maximo Perez, "big brother" of an infant who died in Mooresville, travel over Indiana each season, working in fhe fields with their By ies.
Photos by Lioyd Walton, Times Staff Photographer, tions f issive,. these Mexicans in ntine in | re misaim
county -{tather had time and
Mooresville City Park wait to be examined by Dr. Claude. H. Whi ), State Health Aids Look Into Charges y Huntington County Firms By DONNA MIKELS
atory Mexican tomato pickers are being which import them into Indians Department today.
migrants in| W:
Be Of Abuses b
t Charge that migr : investigation by the State
For New York Without Funds
Labor Act Author Has Been Ailing . TLLETIN
[said ‘he feared the Senator was suffering from an am nesia attack. ;
mis- bound wr
: Charges ‘Sacrificed’ . At Warren in Huntington Coun-{tion of the ty, 11 Mexicans were under diphAt Mooresville 23 Mexicans who | quarantined after they stopped in practices” by, © a Mooresville drugstore to get aid] At for thelr “sick” baby. The child Caseley was dead of diphtheria. ! Two Mexican children from the Warren settlement are in Riley from Hospital here. One, a two-year-old child is critically ill with tuberculosis meningitis. A younger aid “or hospitalization at child is recovering from a siege expense. | “When it comes to tak The Rey. Keith Hanley, cir- of them, we're out on a ? cuit ¥iding minister of Mt. Etna.lhe said. charged the migrants were being . “sacrificed to the almightylhe
transients, he said, they are not eligible for welfare medical state
care
The two children now in Riley, said, were admitted without proper authorization. They were anyway, he said, be-
Some of the migrant'’s hous-taken | “humane considerations}
ing in’ Huntington County *‘con-/caufe stitute's a hazard to the com-'come first.”
Dewey and Schricker Lead |
‘Nature Boy’ Tags Son ‘Tatha Om’
Under the European Recovery HOLLYWOOD, Oct. 16 (UP)—Program, farmers are concen- Eden Ahbez, composer of the hit trating on grains that go directly tune “Nature Boy,” and his wife into human food, he said, and Anna today displayed to the when it ends, they will have to world their week-old son and anshift to raising feed grains for nounced that he has been named ' | Tatha Om. “The American people would] Ahbez explained that Tatha is consume more meat if they could an East Indian word meaning get it,” he said. “Since the pop- “one fully enlightened” and that ulation is still increasing, the he picked Om because it is the farmer does not have to worry prefix for the words omniscient and omnipotent.
” . » tant . . a Hoosier. Hayride .. .., Shortridge high school stu-
dents frolic . ... a picture story........ erin? Page 17
(Weddings, clubs, other news of interest to women, . » » » . »
* 'Beauty-at the:Blackboard.. other picture stories. Page 33
(Editorials, Washington Calling, Our Fair City, other features, Pages 34-48)
| ” . .
[Editorials Cave brat ait as at EPO
14 pages of retail, al H. B. Ne fH rd, TI ah «Ba gram o Qrvard, iil. assified : ident of the foundation, sald Hollywood , «...i0s from this first issue of the Butterfeid would begin work at Inside BL Jn Indianapolis Sunday Times. once. In Indiana 3° * i 2
“enh
: i ;
A roundup of football games and scores. .... . (Additional sports, Pages 50-53) ”
. . . {Business in Indianapolis and over the nation. ”
polis Nees vieranne 44|World Report
tress 56-63 Bide GIANCES .rvrisresnsnses 34] BE sisnssensnnssrnias ne. 49-54 FOrum «.icosvaprnnsnncnnnne 34 Earl WIHSON covvsonvovnnanes 46 cesesnenss 47 Weather Map Cases anebt annie 12 afMliations. + 37 Women's News ....ve00a..17-23 The voting sresaREsaRRRnIY 35 ret. No one,
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1st Times Poll for 1948
Denny Also Favored Over Jacobs
For House Seat From 11th District By ART WRIGHT LEADING THE first tabulations in The Times Straw Vote are Thomas E. Dewey, Republican candidate for President; Henry F. Schricker, Democratic nominee for Governor, and George L. Ask Name Denny, Republican hope for Congressman of the 11th district. Here are the results in percentages:
Dewey (R)..... 552 Truman (D)... 428 Wallace (P)..... 13/change the name of Cathedral = (Incomplete Ballots. ... 0.5) . a
Schricker (D).. 587 Creighton (R). 408 Frisbie (P)...... 0.0] The Most Rev. Joseph (Incomplete Ballots.... 0.5)
viees 50.7 Jucobs (D).... 44.3 Ransom (P)..... 0.8 “ (Incomplete Ballots, ..
PARTY TRENDS srssennsnarsnnrsanses 308
sraaneia 193.10 name Catholic high sciaols f
[Straight Democrat {Scratches «..orevees rar As an. Ses Page. Bi No. Party. Prelerenoe qssssnattsi | Democrats for Republican Dew Republicans for Democrat Trumah....cooneesescasens Democrats for Progressvie Wallaee:...coovioenanssssicnsans Republicans for "Democrat: Sehrieker. i. cvvivervrrrsvesesenas, A,
BOM: covvesnnncnnsocnsnnninns
sessensess 100
Democrats for Republican Republicans for Democrat | Democrats for Republican Denny..... “Marton County registration is The Times Straw Vote is presented only as a publi to draw their own conclusions. prediction of who will win the election
Pages 18-32)
SAARI RINRARNERIRRRNRRIANNNIS
feature for readers It is NOT to
Page 49/be {nterpreted as a Times
" Ballot cards are tabulated as they are received and are Page 54 and 55 on file for a recheck by individ {uals at any time. : These cards are being mailed were voting {daily to residents whose names were taken from the city directory. The pattern used in select is one that has didates t Times Strawito indicate his usual persons political party. % Revised tabulations will - Times—daily Sunday-~with the last f is 100 per cent sec-{lation scheduled
identify an individual voter
The ballot cards read: “If I today, I would mark ) ot as follows: ..” Space is provided for the indi ual to mark his choice of canfor the three offices and choice of Votes to provide a list of § representing all walks of life, all |wage brackets and all political
