Indianapolis Times, Volume 47, Number 230, Indianapolis, Marion County, 4 December 1935 — Page 7
DEC. 4, 1035
SECURITY CHIEF TO COME HERE FOR PARLEYS Visit Timed as Prelude to Special Session of Indiana Assembly. Timed as a prelude to the proposed special session of the Indiana General Assembly, Merrill Murray, chief of the unemployment compensation division of the Federal Social Security Board, is to arrive in Indianapolis Friday. The special session, if called, Is to deal with legislation to effect Indiana's participation in the Federal social program. Mr. Murray, whose visit is sponsored by the Indianapolis Chamber of Commerce, is to hold a series of conferences with committees studying Indiana’s part in the Federal plan. He also is to speak Friday
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night at a meeting In the Lincoln. William H. Book, chamber vice president, states that Mr. Murray’s visit is the climax of a series of studies by committees of the organization, made since enactment of the national security legislation. Mr. Murray and members of the committees are to confer Friday afternoon. At 6 he is to be a guest at an invitational dinner of the Chamber of Commerce at the Lincoln, and later is to address a meeting open to members and their guests. ‘‘Mr. Murray is the government's top man in the field of unemployment compensation,” Mr, Book said in announcing the visit, “and I am sure that he will be able to provide information and adviee that will clarify many of the difficult problems which are confronting employers in adjusting their mode of operation to security legislation.” The Indianapolis chamber is inviting secretaries and managers of similar groups and other state-wide organizations to attend the conferences. Tublic Supper to Be Held Public supper is to be given from 6 to 7 Friday night by the Pastors’ Aid Society of the Westminster Presbyterian Church, State and Sturm-avs.
POTATO TAX IS QUITE PAINLESS, CONSUMER TOLD Levy Does Not Apply on Crops Within Quota, Smith Explains. Proposed tax of three quarters of a cent a pound on potatoes produced in excess of AAA allotments, probably will affect consumers slightly, if at all, Will H. Smith, internal revenue colector, said today. Mr. Smith emphasized that no tax will apply except on potatoes : offered for sale or sold in excess of j quotas. Tax exempt stamps are to be issued to each post office for distribution to potato growers on the basis of production allotments for 1936. Aid to Potato Growers The stamps are to be interchangeable so that if a grower fails to fill his allotment they can be trans-
THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
ferred to another grower, Mr. Smith said. “The act is purely regulatory to prevent over-production and to overcome the condition that has prevailed in some years when growers found it cheaper to allow potatoes to rot in the ground rather than to try to market them,” Mr. Smith explained. Horace E. Abbott, county agricultural agent, said he had received no information on the operation of the law but understood that the small producer is to be ignored in most secticns on the theory that he is not a factor in overproduction anyway. Stamps Balk Bootlegging Potato “bootlegging” can be detected through absence of stamps which must be attached to the various containers in shipment, local AAA officials said. Penalties are provided under the Internal Revenue Act of 1926, Mr. Smith said, explaining this statute covers all tax evasions or violations. Quota of 226.600,000 bushels, which must carry tax exempt stamps, has been fixed on 1936 production by the Agriculture Department, it was said. Potatoes produced in excess of that amount are to be taxed.
BUTLER GROUPS PLAN AGAIN ON YULEJCHEER Food and Clothing to Be Collected; Trophy Goes to Best. Butler University students have announced plans for their fourth annual Christmas cheer campaign which is to open on the Fairview campus next week. Food and clothing is to be collected for distribution among needy families of Indianapolis and vicinity. The campaign is being sponsored by the Butler Collegian with James |.i .jj D E h N T° l i T S ln T°R Y 1E mmm 2nd Floor Corner Penn. bwk* Lemcke Bldg. & Market St.
Roberts as director. A trophy, awarded in 1933 by Charles B, Dyer, jeweler .is to be given the campus organization making the largest contribution to the campaign. Fraternities and sororities have announced their Christmas cheer chairmen. They are: Kenneth Golden, Butler Independent association; Clarence Warren, Delta Tau Delta; Bertram Behrmann, Kappa Delta Rho; Charles Leary, Lambda Chi Alpha; Spurgeon Johnson, Phi Delta Theta; George Bockstahler, Sigma Chi, Clyde Robinson, Sigma Nu. Virginia Reynolds, Pi Beta Phi; Lovilla Horne, Alpha Chi Omega; Jane Crawford, Kappa Alpha Theta;
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Jean Anderson. Delta Delta Delta; Jeanne Mitchell, Kappa Kapoa Gamma; Winifred Andrews. Zeta
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Tau Alpha; Marian Messick, Alpha Omicron Pi. and Mae Louise Small, Delta Gamma
