Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 8 June 1937 — Page 5

monthly dinner at 6 p.m. today at | the Y. W. C. A. Officers are fo be | elected at a pusiness session. :

THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES ~~ “rg cb

bales regarding the divorce.” He felt that it was his duty to remain silent

TUESDAY, JUNE 8, 1937 das STENOTYPISTS TO DINE The Associated ‘Stenotypists of America are to hold their regular

Settlement Due

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= POLICE AND FIRE "PAY RAISE VOTED BY CITY COUNGIL

State Tax Board Approval of Action by City to Be Sought.

Local officers of the International Fire Fighters Association, today said the organization would request the State Tax Board to act favorably on a City Council ordi-

nance restoring ‘pplice and fire-

mens’ pay cuts. The ordinance /was passed last night, 6 votes to 3, but the State Board today declared it would be forced to deny any but emergency measures seeking additional appropriations. | Edward Raub, president; ‘Wallace and Dr. Silas Carr, vice president, all Democrats, voted against passage of the measure. The ordinance provides for salary increases to slightly above the minimum provided under an act of the recent Legislature,! effective Jan. 1, 1938. ° Police’ Crowd Chamber

Approximately 100 police and fire"men crowded the [Council chamber and cheered the passage of the ordince. ;A $168 monthly minimum for first grade, or low bracket department employes, is provided under the State act. The ordinance provides increases for both low and high-bracket police and firemen. It also provides increases for members of the police rafio and Gamewell departments. I Should the act; be approved by the State Tax Board, the additional appropriation for] the city would amount to more {han $150,000. The State Tak Board, in a letter to Dr. Carr, said the Board “could not approve the! ordinance at this time because this could not be considered an emergency.” It also wgs pointed out that no increase in pay gould be made under the Tax Limitation Law and a State act of 1933 which makes it illegal to increase salaries. The latter law provides that all salaries must be fixed on or before the first Monday in September fo the next calendar vear and that rio increases can he made for the ensuing year. Bike Regisiration Passed The Council also approved an ordinance requiring the registration with police of all bicycles. A minimum isstiance fee of $1 will be charged. Action was deferred on a bicycle licensing and regulation measure. i Police Chief Morrissey told the Cotincil that there are approximately 1250 bicycles stolen each year and that those recovered were never returned to the pwner in many cases due to lack of identification. Chief Morrissey said that a 30-day

_ campaign in which bicycle owners

will be asked | to register is to be undertaken immediately. Stations will be set up throughout the city for registration Other ordingnces passed included one ‘appropriating more than $4000 for. the purchase of six trucks for the Works Board; abolishing the position of assistant market master, appropriatingfproceeds of the President's Birthday dances to the Health Department for tuberculosis prevention and appropriation of $1800 to coniplete construction on the new dog pound.

Funds Earmarked

Ordinances | introduced and read for the first time included transfer ‘of taxicab licenses, budget transfers for the Works and Sanitation De-

partment and Safety Department and annexing of West Side property for the Park Department. Legal opinion on the salary ordinance also was furnished the Council by Floyd Mattice, City Corporation Counsel, who said ,that increases could not be paid out of any money now ¢i hand, as the funds are earmarked. Dr. Carr | added that Philip Zoercher, State Tax Board chair-

e < man, indicated that the Attorney

Y General wouitl back the Tax Board

in its stand against the new ordinance. In addition to the Tax Board attitude, the [City is already close to its $2 tax limitation, it was said. Attempts to pay at least part of police salaries from gasoline tax funds also gre frowned upon by the State Acdcounts Board, it was indicated. Under an amended statute, gasoline funds must k2 used only for street repair and maintenance.

30 TEACHERS HERE

TO ATTEND PARLEY]

The Indianapolis school system will be represented at the National Education, Association convention in Detroit, Jtthe 27 to July 1} by about 30 teachers and officials, it was said today. : The Indianapolis Federation of Teachers will have nine official delegates at the 75th annual session. They are Vivian S. Rankin, chairman; W. B. Johnson, Ethel Hightower, Frieda Herbst, Sara Ewing, William A. Evans, Ada M. Coleman, W. S. Barnhart and K. V. Ammerman. Alternates are Irma Bachman, Frances Fuschman, Murray Dalman, Bertha Ebbert, Helen Haynes, Elizabeth| Kirby, C. E. Sunthimer and Rose H. Thompson.

CLEANING FIRM AND = PHARMACY |LOOTED

er come.

Policé today sought burglars who entered two business establishments last night. . Howard W. Billeisen reported his pharmacy at 1572 College Ave. was robbed of cigarets valued at $60, an undetermined amount of liquor and $10 in cash. Ethel Washington, proprietor of a cleaning establishment at 507 Douglas St. [told police $50 worth of clothing was taken. |

BUY DIAMOND

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plenty of camping equipment.

Many a boy who has struggled to balance a basket on his handlebars will envy Robert Bellamy, 16, Akron, O., youngster, above, who designed and built this streamlined bicycle trailer, with a little aid from his dad. The trailer has a rear bumper, a black and chromium design and skips along on balloon tires. Bob constructed it ‘to hold

record clerks said today.

LOGAN TO BE DINED ONY’ RETIREMENT

Quits Secretaryship After | 30 Years of Service.

i | /A dinner honoring Ira N. Logan, wi o is retiring after more than 30 years as secretary of the Y. M. C. A, is to be given in the “Y” June 15, F. C.. Jordan, committée chairman, announced today. { Invitations are to be sent to men : who have been associated with Mr. Logan in his Y. M. C. A. service and to those who, when boys, were affiliated with the junior department under his direction. | Mr. Logan has been associated with the junior department since 1913. He joined the local staff in 1905. He conducted the membhership campaign which was responsible for more than 1500 new members when the new building at New York and Illinois Sts. was erected.

BLAMES CRIME ON DRINKING BY MINORS

Sale. of liquor to minors “is the cause of the local crime wave,” Criminal Court Judge |Frank P. Baker said yesterday in [sentencing a youth to 90 days on |the Penal Farm. William Carter, 20, of 814 Lincoln St., was convicted of driving a car while intoxicated.

Record Is Set for Dog Bites in Single Day as 10 Are Nipped

The greatest number of dog bites in a single day during the past two years was recorded here yesterday when 10 persons were treated at City Hospital and by private physicians during a 12-hour period; police

Under the present filing system, each dog bite report is listed according to the day in which it occurred. The largest number previously - ——— ———®recorded was on May 7, 1936, when

seven persons were bitten. Those bitten yesterday were: Jerry Finnes, 6, of 1515 English

.Ave., right side; Mrs. C. Warnock,

4324 Park Ave. left hand; Robert Eubank, 13, of 1614 Ludlow Ave., left leg; Katherine Smith, 9, of 819 Coffey St., right leg; John Burk, 9, of 517 W. 17th St., right leg: Roy Rogers, 34, of 1025 N. Illinois St., left leg; James Delaney, 7, of 2841 N. New Jersey St., left hand; Elmer Russell, 9, of 2222 Barrett Ave., left leg and arm; Jeannette Leak, 2, of

829 S. Randolph St., left leg. and

Omer Gilliland, 9, of 1043 S. West St., right hand. Four were treated at City Hospital. Three dog owners were arrested on charges of harboring a vicious dog and failure to have a dog licefse.

STETSON IS HONORED IN P.-T. A. RESOLUTION

The Indianapolis Council of Parents and Teachers today presented to the School Board a resolution

mourning the recent death of School Superintendent Paul C. Stetson. | The resolution, signed by Mrs. W. W. Hadley, president said in part: | “Realization is immediate and overwhelming that Mr. Stetson’s

passing is a loss to the cause of |

youth that cannot be estimated.”

PAUL FERREL ELECTED Paul O. Ferrel, 5562 Central Ave, vice president of the Real Hosiery Mills, has been elected

regional vice president of the Central States‘'of the National Federation of Sales Executives, it was an-

nounced today.

Silk |

FACE AND TEETH DEFECTS AMONG CHILDREN NOTED

Ten Per Cent Afflicted, Cleveland Doctor Tells Association.

By DAVID DIETZ

Times Science Editor ATLANTIC CITY, June 8.—Ten per cent of America’s children are growing up to be facial and dental cripples because of untreated allergies, Dr. Milton B. Cohen of Cleveland said today at the annual convention of the American Medical

Association. Dr. Cohen exhibited the results of researches carried on by Prof. T. Wingate Todd of the Western Re-

serve University Medical School and -

himself with funds provided by the Brush Foundation and allied foundations. “Deformed faces, jaws and teeth constitute a crippled condition just as truly as a deformed arm or leg,” Dr. Cohen explained. Hay fever and asthma are probably the allergies best known to the public. But medical men are familiar with hundreds of them.

Abnormal Sensitivity

An allergy may be defined as any abnormal sensitivity to some factor in the environment. It may be a food, as for example strawberries, which cause certain people to break out in a rash. “Our studies have demonstrated that allergies in children interfere with growth,” Dr. Cohen said. “At different ages, different parts of the body are making the maximum growth. In very small children, the growth is greatest in the facial area. If allergies are. permitted to persist at tH age, the result is a facial cripple? Dr. Cohen exhibited x-ray pictures to show normal growths of face and teeth compared with the deformities which result from allergies. In a general lecture before the association, Dr. Claire L. Straith of Detroit warned that automobile accidents were becoming a greater problem than all the other surgical problems of today.

Mrs. Joan Sutherland

LONDON HEARS SIMPSON TO WIN

Vindication of Charge He Took Cash to Allow Divorce Hinted.

By United Press LONDON, June 8—A settlement has been agreed upon in the slander suit which Ernest A. Simpson, divorced husband of the Duchess of Windsor, brought to protect himself from gossip, it was understood today. His suit, against Mrs. Joan Sutherland, a society woman, is No. 23 in the High Court list of special jury cases to be heard this session.

It was taken for granted that an expected agreed statement would constitute al complete vindication for Mr. Simpson against the charge which he complained that Mrs. Sutherland made at a luncheon here—that he was “well paid” for permitting the Duchess to divorce him. Mr. Simpson was thoroughly an‘gered at gossip over London tea ta-

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Indianapolis Railways

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Colonial

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‘president, is to officiate.

as to his role, but he was enraged

when he heard of Mrs. Sutherland's remark. Mrs. Sutherland is the wife of Lieut. Col. A. H. C.,Sutherland, According to information, she was at a society luncheon when she made the remark of which Mr. Simpson complains. Mrs. Peter Kerr-Smiley. Mr. Simpson's sister, is understood to have been a guest.

ELKS WILL INDUCT MAYOR KERN FRIDAY

Maryor Kern is to be inducted into thé Indianapolis Lodge No. 13, Benevolent and Protective Order of | Elks Friday night- by high offi- | cials of the Indiana State Elks’ Association. Milo B. Mitchell,

face.

shapes.

newly-elected The ritualistic team from Linton also is to take part. ; ;

ISION Frames from Dr. Fahrbach at Kay's are designed to fit your particular type of Dr.

Fahrbach takes great

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but. prescribes proper lenses and

Dr-#e Tihnbach

Registered Optometrist

137 W. Washington 5t.

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