Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 1 September 1937 — Page 3

+

td

‘WEDNESDAY, SEPT.

63,000 AWAIT SCHOOL BELLS NEXT TUESDAY

Traffic Guard Promised if Demanded: Paralysis Peril Held Slight.

(Continued from Page One)

ing “of “the > schools “from the stand- | point of any contagious angle. How- |

ever, with a sporadic prevalency of the malady in a few areas in other states and the development of cases in a few sections of Indiana, the Department is somewhat in a state of apprehension.

“Furthermore, the humid weather

which has prevailed for several days | is favorable for the transmission of |

the malady in the event there ware carriers of the disease in the com-

munity. A hopeful vein is in the should be | The

fact that cooler weather expected with the fall months. virus of infantile paralysis does not seem to thrive in cooler or months.” In an address today, urged

Mr. Morgan

| 1, 1987 _.

{

colder

the teachers of the public |

schools to develop a greater appre- |

ciation of the importance of professional enthusiasm in teaching.” He spoke before 2000 local teachers and principals of a series of three-day meetings. Pays Tribute to Stetson

Superintendent Morgan paid tri-

bute to the late Paul Stetson, for- |

mer school superintendent, and reviewed Mr. Stetson’s 10-point program for Indianapolis public schools, which was set forth two years ago. “I wish that we may a measure of both Paul zeal and practical-mindedness,’

Morgan said. : “We need to realize that ours is

all inherit Stefson’s ' Mr.

not a task that is done by formula, |

but rather in large part by inspiration. For many of our pupils, their greatest need is for awakened ambition, 8 new sense of values, and finer ideals for self and society, Mr. Morgan declared. Elementary school principals met with D. T. Weir, assistant superinrendent following the general meeting. Group meetings of special teachers with the supervisors and

directors of the various departments |

are scheduled for tomorrow and Friday. 23,000 Teachers in State

Meanwhile Floyd I. McMurray,

State Superintendent of Public In- | 750.000 |

announced that 75.000 beginners,

struction, pupils, including

in the state would return to school | next week. He also announced that |

23.000 teachers would be employed in Hoosier schools this year. At its meeting last night, the City School Board adopted & resolution recommending & 2-cent reduction in the proposed 1938 school city tax levy. The decrease would make the levy $1.65. A total of $9589982 in excess of budget requirements would be brought in by levy proposal, A. B. Good, board business director, said. Letters recommending the levy reduction are to be sent the State Tax Commisisoners Board and the County Auditor.

New Building Approved

The Board also gave its approval to the erection of a new brick building at School No. 68 at Riley Ave. and 21st St. Construction on the new $79,000 structure is to be started next Tuesday. The building is expected to be ready for occupancy

the Board's original | school

in the Technical | High School auditorium for the first |

terday after | by the opening of the second school semester.

Thirteen resignations, five leaves of absence, 29 teacher appoiniments |

and 21 appointments of high school |

student assistants and library assistants also were approved. The Board approved the retirei ment of 10 $1000 building bonas of October, 1920.

WPA Approves School Grant

John K. Jennings, Indiana | head, today announced approval of [a $135241 Indianapolis school and | library improvement project. About 100 men are to begin work immediately. Within three 400 will be employed, Mr. Jennings said. The project carries an allotment of $111,687, and the School Board has added $23,554 for materials.

Milwaukee Delays

‘Opening Lower Grades

| MILWAUKEE, Sept. 1 (U. Milwaukee's City Health Depart- | ment, fearful of an infantile paralysis epidemic, today took steps to protect the city's 20.000 kindergarten and first grade pupils Opening | of school for them was postponed from Sept. 8 to Sept. 20. Parochial and public schools are affected by the order which

WPA |

weeks, |

| tomorrow, | Don R. Stiver

|

Here is what the Greyhonnd transcontinental bus looked like yesits crash with an il at Sr na.

The driver

STARTS INQUIRY IN FATAL CRASH

Sheriff Seeks to Fix Blame

For Goshen Collision in Which Five Die.

GOSHEN, Sept. 1 (U. P)--Eik-hart County Sheri{f’'s officers today began investigation of the collision between an automobile and a traascontinental passenger bus, in which five persons were killed and 27 injured, two seriously. Coroner Karl M. Vetter would start an inquest at 10 a. in. State Safety Director said he was consid-

said he

| ering an independent investigation. |

| ports

P.)— | : | opric | drove

| over end and came to rest in a ditch

also |

prohibits the children affected from |

attending gatherings. will begin as scheduled, Sept.

WARN 10 HOOSIERS OF TYPHOID PERIL

Ten Indiana rived in the German liner were warned today

theaters or other public Classes for older pupils 8.

travelers who ar-

by

| before

the United States aboar: | Hansa last week | national, |

| state and community health author- |

| ities that they had been exposed to | paratyphoid fever, After passengers of had gone ashore, it was discovered several members of the crew were ill with paratyphoid. National health authorities immediately began =a

the Hansa | Neb,

search through the country for the |

i a passengers.

IN INDIA NA POLIS

MEETINGS TODAY

Kiwanis Club, luncheon. Columbia Club, noon. Lions Club, noon Xun Men's isdn sien Club, dinner, Y, MC A. 6D Para Avni

Hotel Severin, noon 12th District AEE ican Legion, Board of Trade, noo Sigma Alpha Epsilon, Trade. noon Real Estate Board, Property Management Division, luncheon, Hotel Washington, noon. Marion County Teachers’ Institute, group meetings, John Strange School, all Foundrymen's Association, dinner, Washington, 6: 30 p. m

luncheon, Hotel Washington,

association, luncheon,

luncheon,

luncheon, Board of

MEETINGS TOMORROW Indianapolis Real Estate Board, luncheon, Hotel Washington, noon, Advertising Club of Indianapolis, eon. Columbia Club, noon. Sigma Chi, luncheon, Board of noon. American Business Club, lumbia Club, noon. Acacia, luncheon, Board of Trade, noon. Sigma Nu, luncheon, Hotel Washington,

noon Indiana Motor Traffic luncheon, Hotel Antlers, noon. Unity Chub, luncheon, Board of noon. . Construction League of Indianapolis, luncheon, Architects and Builders building, noon.

lunchTrade,

luncheon, Co-

Association,

Trade

Alliance NL meeting, Hotel Wash-

ington, He Ranapols Council, sociation, meeting, 0a m,

Hotel

MARRIAGE LICENSES (These lists are from official records at the County Court House. The Times is not responsible for any errors in nrmes or addresses. )

29. of 22 Maple

John Armington Wright, 23, of 6470 Park

Court; Mary Alice Moore,

29 of 335 oe le Ave.. 23, of 1518 8S. Ala-

ve Vernon Neubauer, Esther, M. Khnitsch

H. Ell .« Martha Jean Meridian St Edwin M. Hartley St.; Evelyn Thiesing, +

27

of 2502 E. “Mauser 21, of 2709 N.

22, of .854 Tollman 21. of 1854 Tallman

‘Johnstone D. Cockerille. 26. of WashingSadie Lillian Self 27. of 1528

St ade Phillips Cotter, 2%. ot Chillicothe, | s Martha Helen Hatmaker. 22. of Indian-

20. of 1 Lindsley,

<f,

ns Robert Cashman Talbott St.: Phyllis M. E. 24th St. Williamn 8, Martin Mary Belle Snyder, 70, Indianapolis, James B. Skillern., 22. of 95% W, ington St.. Sarah Dee Pate, 20. of ¢ Washington St Henry Schroeder, 35. tilda Sailer. 33, of 705

BIRTHS

Girls

Joseph, Mildred Bright. Lazar, Pearl Motz, ai St. John. Louise Wall at St. Francis. Jack, Martha Siler, at St. Francis. Emmett, Ruth Griffith, at St. Francis. Claude, Geraldine Adams, at St. Morris. Carsa Allen, at St, francis. John, Dora Bickel, at St. Francis. Harold, Leona Divenger, at St. Francis. William, Iva Carter, at 720 Beecher. George, Marie Johnson, at 1304 Tecum- |

708 21

wl,

71, Bridgeport,

969, Indianapolis; W. 32d St.

at St. Francis. Francis.

Boys

Jeanette Lasiter at St

at St. Francis. Franeis ut St, Francis. at St. Francis. at &t. Francis. at St. Francis. Francis, at 1432 N.

Russell, Ellis, Dorothy Sluss, Ray. Helen O'Rear, Fred, Helen Croner, John. Lottie Hiese, Orville, Thelma Lucas, Gregory, Opal Dale, at St. Chester, Margaret Owens, Warman,

Letha May Moore, 48, at Methodist, encephalitis, abel Clair Memever, 44 at St. cent’s, cerebral hemorrhage.

Hotel

58th |

N. of 420 Ind. gg |

Ma-

Francis, |

Vin- |

} za Sumner, 94 1525 Brookside, r1osclerosis Nannie A. Smith, 77. hroncho-pneumonia Thomas M. Vinnecdge, 72, tured hip Anna Snow, 69, static pneumonia. Mary Gallagher, carcinoma. Benjamin C. Applegate, 66, lawn, coronary occlusion Ernest Montgomery, 58 noma. Edward Alcon, myocarditis Frank Markham, 77, at 2849 N. Sherman Drive, cerebral hemorrhage, Susan Porter, 74, of 1925 W. 10th, teriosclerosis. Rachel Anna Kettler, {| coronary occlusion John Smith, 67. at 1138 cardiovascular renal disease Cynthia Savanah Chapman, 7s, Churchman, cerebral Seo rhage bert Rushton, 22, at Belt skull fracture. Kenneth Dale Hale, mitral insufficiency. Samuel Edward 10th, vardiovascular renal disease William Dubinion, 32, at tol. pulmonary tuberculosis Frieda Ruth Beck, 40, at St pulmonary embolism John Mitchell, 1 month, itis Albert { mellitus Nora E hemorrhage,

at

at St, Vincent's, at City, at 45 N. Ritter, 48, at at 521 Woodat Long, carci-

59, at Methodist, chronic ar61, at S. Kevstone, at 1041 Railway, 3, 558 Drover,

2505 E

at

Jones, 60, at

Vincent's, at City, enter65. City,

City,

Ferguson at diabetes

Berger, 83, at cerebral

Parent-Teacher As- | Washington,

OFFICIAL WEATHER

{ { |

INDIANAPOLIS cloudy to cloudy tonight and with probably thundershowers | afternoon; continued warm,

tomorrow

TEMPERATURE Sept. 1, 1956— 66

BAROMETER

. Mm. 30.1%

Precipitation 24 hrs. ending 7 a. Total pr Feeipirarion Excess

m...

MIDWEST WEATHER

Indiana—Partly cloudy to cloudy night and tomorrow, tomorrow afternoon; continued warm. Minois-—Partly cloudy to cloudy tonight and tomorrow; local thundershowers morrow afternoon; continued warm,

Lower Michigan | tonight and tomorrow; local showers tomorrow afternoon: + | warmer southeast portion tonight, Ohio--Mostly cloudy tonight and | row; little change in temperature, | Kentucky —Partly cloudy tonight; row cloudy, probably showers | southeast portion; little change perature,

| to-

tomeor-

in tem- |

| VL ERTHER IN OTHER CITIES AT | Station. Weather, | Amarillo, Tex. .+..Cloudy | Bismarck, N. Boston . Chicago | Cincinnati | Cleveland, | Denver | Doge. City, Folena, Mont, { | Jacksonville, | Kansas City, Little Rock, Los Angeles . | Miami, Fla. Minneapolis Mobile, Ala. ... » Orleans York | Skin. City, maha, Neb, Pittsburgh Portland, Om, San Antonio, Tex. { San Francisco | St. AT Cloudy Tampa, .+..Cloudy Washinton. 'D. 'C.....Clear

Pt Cldy Cloudy

| Judge Charles Karabeil | cases in one hour | motorists a total | Hoffman, | fined $26 and

local thundreshowers |

hypo- |

862 Buchanan, |

|

| happened

County officials investigated reof witnesses that Allison Bishopric, 55, president of the BishProducts Co. Cincinnati, his sedan through a stop sign at the intersection of Highways | 15 and 20, five miles north of here. His automobile struck the loaded bus on the side. The bus rolled end

upside dovn. Fire Starts in Engine Fire started in the bus engine a few minutes later. The driver of a companion bus, following a quarter mile back, extinguished the fire it spread. The bus, owned by the Greyhound Lines and en [route to Cleveland from Chicago, carried 36 passengers. Ten ambulances from Goshen | Elkhart carried the dead and jured to hospitals, The dead: A. G. Carpenter, Mrs. James Kelleher, Chicago Raymond Buskin, St. Louis, porter. John Heinsohn, Buffalo, N. Y Allison Bishopric, Cincinnati, Mrs. Andrew Statella, Omaha. and her daughter, Anna, 7,

Child 1 2nores

and in-

Towa City, Ta.

but her

“Tell Joan supper is ready,

Mrs. Bert Barrett cautioned da

But Dorothy Lec is in City Hospital today bruised from head to foot.

| She was hit frac- |

by an automobile a fe The accident occurred in fron Her father, said family regular curriculum for Dorothy

ing.

“What shows is for-

important safety is,” he said. to Dorothy Lee what happens when safety gotten for a moment.” Mrs. Margaret Derains,

26, of

| Beech Grove, was the car driver,

Methodist, | Ave,

Shirley Green, 33, 1925 Tacoma suffered bruised legs and skin abrasions yesterday when she was struck by a hit-and-run driver at the corner of Tacoma and Roosevelt

{ Aves,

2039 N. Cabi- |

| home at 306 W. a fence

| the fence had becn prodded by (car in a parking lot on the other | side.

United States Weather Bureau _}

FORECAST — Partly tomorrow |

| and bruises.

Fence Flossie Lawrence, 54, was in the back yard of her New York St. when and knocked revealed a

Knocked Down by

Mrs, working

“struck out”

her down. Investigation

This car had been bumped in turn

‘by a second auto driven by George | Defodis, age 10, son of the lot man- | ager.

Mrs. Lawrence was treated for a cut on the head, an injured back Police reported the

( mishap to juvenile authoritiss.

Autoists Fined S287

Municipal Court, heard 17 todav and fined $287. Ulysses Ave, was sentenced to three days in jail for driving through a safety zone and failure to have a

Meanwhile in

of 1710 College

| driver's license,

|

30 | > st.

-Partly cloudy to cloudy |

thunder- | somewhat |

Charles Fenters, 106 W. North

light and speeding. One person was convicted of reck-

| less driving and fined 35 and cost.

| Two ‘oor | charges, and five in Extreme |

were fined on speeding for making a left turn on sign. Six convictions were

recorded on disobeying traffic sig-

nals and fined a total of $71.

I »> LEGION 1S T0 MEET

A meeting of theh 12th District | American Legion is to be held at! 7:45 a. m. at 119 E, Ohio St., Judge | Wilfred Bradshaw, retiring district | commander, said today. Al Maurer is the new qistrict leader.

A COOL KITCHEN With Westinghouse

Electric Range

Terms to Suit

VONNEGUTS

L

| county's delinquent

hies

| of children,

| Cleveland, | City,

| Janssens, | Chicago;

and Mrs.

‘Careful’ Of Mother,

be careful when vou cross

“safety” Lee | “I've preached and preached about being careful and told them how |

was fined $27 for running a red

THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES 'FIVE DIE. 21 HURT IN BUS- AUTO CRASH REBOSHEN <x vn vw %% vv % » + vu.»

| | | |

RUSSIAN ACTION

| |

9

Times<Acme Photo

of the auto, and four passengers on the bus were killed and 27 other

passengers were in eel. nv

Oftticials Hope To Get Site tor Juvenile Home

Hopes for a new County Juvenile | Detention Home site were revived to- | {day as officials continued their | three-year search. County Commissioners said they | wore negotiating for a lease on a | downtown building with prospects | that the deal would be concluded shortly. This announcement followed | charges made last week by an Indi- | anapolis club leader that the pres- | ent home at 225 E. Michigan St. | was “unsuitable” to house the | and dependent | children, County Commissioner Dow W. Vor- | said the new building now being sought is a third larger than | the present home and would provide adequate space for segregation | much desired by Juve- | nile authorities, Also treated Szesz,

were injured seriously. for injuries were: Joseph Mrs. Carpenter, Iowa Ia., and her daughter; Mrs Adolph Lades, Lexington; Mass.; Clyde T. Cadwallader, Buffalo; Rose Schakheitle, New York; Mrs. Winnie Jackson, Chicago; James Kelle- | her, Chicago; Sidney Wicholas, Lawrence, Mass.: Mrs. J. L, Morencie, Mich.; Mr. and Mrs Hartman, Waynesboro, Pa.; Mrs. Martin Sweicler, Chicago, Mus. S. Stezelberg, New York: Mrs, John Heinsohn, Buffalo; Mrs. Josephine | Dunn, San Francisco; Mrs. Marie | Chicago: Renee Kalelth, | Mrs. Gladys Cleveland, and children, Doiss; Charles Baker, Marion, Ill. | Fannie Stafford, Mrs, | Evangeline McCullough, and daugh- | ters, addresses unknown,

Bachman, | D. 1.

Schuemann, | Loren and |

Call | Struck by Car

[ “Your

[and your acquiescence, | perturbed

| anonymous. | newspaperman and could quite ap- | preciate your

( the letter,

| as I sat and listened. Finally, ‘distinc-

| staff, to-wit,

MAYOR TAKES CUPID'S ROLE

Acts as Intermediary and Gets Note of Thanks Franm Conada.

Mayor intermediary in a romantic

Kern acted as the gallant “affaire’

| when he received a request last Sat[urday

from Canada to send $1 worth of flowers to the Canadians “lady fair” who iives here. He delivered the flowers. Evervthing seemed just fine. Then today, he received this letter: “Dear Mr. Mavor (The first letter Worship.”) “Many thanks consideration of

was addressed to

vour kindly recent request I was rather re the unexpected publicity and thankful that myself and the lady in question remained However, I am an old

for my

up-to-the-minute Indianapolis newspapermen would see in my note to you, and somewhat unusual request, a human nature story.” The Mayor Sighs city in the continued

“I hope to visit your not-too-distant future,”

filled, I shall do myself the pleasure of calling to thank vou personally. Incidentally, you might be

| amused and interested to know that the Canadian Broadcasting Com- | the |

over shock I re-

mission covered the story air and I received a distinct

gret that I have not the tion’ of being able to carry ‘M. P.’ after my signature. My status is

a member of the House of Commons |

clerk in charge of rec-

ords, distribution branch. Wishing

you and yours prosperous times, and |

best of health,

“Yours most sincerely,

Kern sighed and said the romantic and his local

Mayor Canadian

lady fair still must remain unidenti-

| fied.

the street,” |

ughter, Dorothy Lee, 7 her mother's warn-

1240 Prospect St.

w seconds after t of her home, talks in the evening

and her sister, Joan, 9.

. ” ® MARION COUNTY TRAFFIC TOLL TO DATE

Deaths

n

Accidents Injured TRAFFIC ARRESTS Speeding Reckless driving Drunken driving ..... Running red light ........ - Others

CLAUDETTE COLBERT ILL HOLLYWOOD, Sept. 1 (U. P.) — Claudette Colbert, movie star, was ill today with sinus trouble. She was forced to stop work on the picture “Tovarich,” but was expected to recover in a few days.

constitute a |

| Board secretary, | dianapolis | whooping { reached serious

| ease

| the Health Board. | this it not | fenders will result,” he said.

He also said, “L'amour toujours

| 'amour.”

WHOOPING COUGH

CASES SPREADING

Herman G. Morgan, today parents a wave of cough cases here has proportions,

Dr.

He said 200 cases,

which proved fatal, were reported

| to the Health Board last month. He | said the whooping cough death rate | for | diphtheria or scarlet

children is greater than in

fever Morgan attributed spread to failure

the aisto report

Dr.

cases, “Bach case he raporied to In cases where

done, prosecution of ¢:-

must

SLEEPING POWDER FATAL

An overdose of sleeping powder today was held responsible for death of Mrs. Mary Luella Nash, 56, of 1711 Lawndale St.

Do You

it is a joy to

9

East Washington

SECOND FLOOR Take Elevator

Your Children Dining Out?

It should be a part of every child's education—

“child is entitled—and—at the Russet CAFETERIA

—an inexpensive luxury for the entire family.

Dinner Service—4:

Russet

The Unusual CAFETERIA

Take

which every

30 to 1:30 P. M.

| Tientsin,

IN CHINESE WAR HELD POSSIBLE

Belief Based on Growing Japanese Threat to Her Interests.

(Continued from Page One)

provide that China shall ‘recognize | Russia's dominance in Sinkiang,

| York “bit player, in | night in a civil ceremony performed |

Tallulah Weds ‘Bit Player’ in Georgia Home

JASPER, Ala, Sept. 1 (U, P).— Tallulah Bankhead kissed her newly | acquired actor-husband today, de- | clared “this is my first and last marriage,” and dashed off on her | honeymoon after a “surprise” wed- | ding ceremony at the home of her | father, Speaker of the House Wil- | liam B. Bankhead. The 35-year-old star of stage and | screen and John Emery, 32, New " were married last

return for Soviet munitions, but the | by Probate Judge L. G. Garrison.

| Japanese assert that the reports are | They had flown

| correct. Developments Cited

Developments of the past 24 hours | | included : On the vital Northern Front | [Japan's great drive into Shantung | province, along a route south of appeared again bogged

[down in the mud and 48 hours had

passed since the “big” push here started without news of a Japanese | victory, In Tientsin itself friction between Japan and Britain had increased to a point where the Japanese Army was forced ‘Hy cease

| sending troops through the British | concession,

| had not | rear

Bloody fighting with thousands of |

casualties on both sides continued around Shanghai but the Japanese even crushed the Chinese | guard,

__ | second-closs Chinese troops. It ap-

| daily.

ir wig “and if my hopes are ful-

Health | warned In- |

including four |

the |

peared that It would be a week or more before Gen. would be in position to strike at the strongly intrenched Chinese positions prepared for Nanking,

| opens in Rochester, N. Y., Oct. with Miss Bankhead as ‘Cleopatra. a limit.’

|

|

composed of decidedly

|

Iwane Matsui | | sky,

the defense of |

The position df the foreign com- |

is becoming regulations have and it was antici-

S. Dollar steamship

here Curfew been modified pated that U, line steamer would at the port within a week.

munity

The Ja=

| panese are not interfering with foreign shipping unreasonably and re- | ports

have ‘virtually ships from the are entirely

that they barred foreign Whangpoo River” correct, United States consular ties, realizing the grave import of the announcement, all Americans to get out of interfor points as soon as they could. The Japanese warning brought into the potential war zone all of China's 3,000,000 square miles of territory and 423,000,000 people. Already Japanese airplanes bombed such towns as Tatung, 330 miles inland in the North: Nanking, 280 miles inland from Shanghai; Kalgan, in the North, and Canton 1250 miles south of Kalgan

Roper Says Tension for Chinese Trade Lifts

WASHINGTON, Sept. 1 (U, Secretary of Commerce Roper today

Pp) said

can merchant vessels would be! given access to the region. Mr. Roper said at his press con-

easior |

resume calling |

in- |

authori- |

at once warned |

tension has lifted in Chinesa | waters and that he believed Ameri- |

to Birmingham |

| from New York, and had motored |’ here to the Bankhead home,

the role of Caesar | which 15,

Emery will play

in “Antony and Cleopatra,’

FLIER ESCAPES BLAZING CRASH

Maj. Sevardy Overturns Plane Intended for Bendix Race.

NEW YORK, Sept. 1 (U, P.).—A low wing, all-metal monoplane piloted by Maj. Alexander de Sever-

Corp., ran off the runway at Floyd Bennett Airport today, overturned and caught fire. The pilot was not injured. Maj. Seversky had flown : the plane to the airport from Farmingdale, Long Island, preliminary to a | projected flight to Los Angeles where he intended to enter the Bendix Races, landing. | The plane, witnesses said, was considerably damaged and will not be able to enter the transcontinental air race scheduled to start from Burbank Airport near Los Angeles Friday. Maj. Seversky was rescued from the burning wreckage by Navy men at the airport, :

had r been the State or Navy

ference that no order | issued by either Department merchant sengers and waters,

Report F. D. R. Rejects ‘Sending Ships to China

HYDE PARK, N. Y. Sept. 1 U. P.).—President Roosevelt and Admiral William D. Leahy, chief of naval operations, were reported by official sources to have decided that there is no need for additional American warships in waters at present, Mr. Roosevelt and Admiral Leahy conferred here today, to the President revealed that his | talk with Admiral Leahy “covered the whole Oriental situation.”

vessels cargo

carrying pasfrom Chinese

have |

| hospital budget

replied,

head of the Seversky Aircraft |

The mishap occurred in |

withdrawing American |

Chinese |

A source close |

PAOM3

4 COUNCILMEN PROMISE CUTS IN "38 BUDGET

President Raub y Aish Hints He Opposes Proposed 23-Cent Tax Raise.

(Continued from Page One)

| Sanitation, Park, Municipal Airport and Safety Administration, Republican William Oren yesters day disputed a $700 item in the for more films in the X-ray division. After Dr. Myers declared it a “vital need,” Mr. Oren “Everything is vital at City | Hospital, but there's an end to the but von Myers

“All right, you can cut it | take the responsibility,” Dr, | said. | “My conscience is clear,” Mr. Oren replied. Council tentatively reduced the request $200. The question of paying Solita came up again in the City pital hearing, with Mr, Oren saye “I am bitterly opposed to all salaries throushout the

vacation

in: acation Dociget ” | One member suggested they double (up during vacations, to which Dr, | Myers replied: “You can't give the [olivemen and firemen something | and not us.” Adolph Fritz argued that it was useless to give vacations if they have to double up.

Fears Labor Trouble

“We trouble warned, Although Council took no action on the request, members said all vacations with pay would be conside ered together later, An item of $150 for penses to attend conventions reduced by Council to $75. Dr. Myers told Council that Dn, H. C. Thornton, hospital pathologist, | had threatened to resign unless the | department's request for a $500 ine crease in his salary was granted. The Safety Administration Des partment request for $677 more in | 1938, or a total of $14.842, was ap= proved. Members also agreed to res move the entire Municipal Airport request of $23.496 from the budget when City Controller Walter Boet« cher explained that next vear the airport will be able to operate with= in its revenues. This move cut 8 of a cent from the proposed tax levy, Last vear, an appropriation | raised by the tax ance, or $151905, revenue, No reductions were made in the Park Departments request for $20.« 329 more in 1038, a total appropria= tion of $436.969, By transferring $19.010 to gasos iine funds, the requested increase was principally for pay raises. Soma members marked for a later cone sideration a $12,500 appropriation for a new community and shelter house at Northwestern Park

labor he

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