Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 3 September 1937 — Page 13

FRIDAY. SEPT. 3, 1937 THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES PAGE 13

COUNCIL CUTS EGGS TO BRING 1938 CITY TAX DOWN TO $1.27

Accident Bureau Proposal Virtually Killed by $18,000 Slash.

(Continued from Page One)

quirements, even with the police

and firemen’s marginal $57,000 in. This was accepted, after caucuses, | as a compromise arrangement. Mr. Raub’s proposal was: All salaries! below $1000 a vear, and especially | those which already had been increased 5 cents an hour, to remain the same; that a restoration of Tz per cent of the 1932 cuts be made to salaries between $1000 and $1199; that a 3 per cent restoration of the | 1932 cut be given to salaries over $1200 vearly oun cil tional permanent employees and requests for temporary empioyees | in all departments that would have | totaled Bib 29 in salaries if trey | had teen allowed. Council refused to grant a 1- cent |

He'll Be Careful in the Future

i

1 denied requests for addi-| :

levy for a sinking fund for eventual | :

Sout

Side Mzavor

track elevation, Walter C. Boetcher |

h after

even | :

tated that it would be good bt ie |

ness on the part of the city.

Park Request Cut $25,000 |

Opponents said that they were | » not certain that the railroads would | be ready to pay their share of the | elevation costs. Others said they could not be certain that the payments to the proposed fund would be kept up in succeeding years. Council quickly cut $25,000 from the Park Department request, reducing the total appropriation to $411,969, which is a few thousand lower than the current appropriation. Council was to meet today at 4 p. m. to wind up its budget request consideration and President Raub said they hoped to pare the rate by one more cent. The rate, if approved at $1.27, will be second highest for the city in 30 | vears, exceeded only by the 1934 rate | of 81 31.

$300,000 Cut From Budget Requests |

The Marion County Council to- | day had pared approximately $300,000 from budget requests of departments and tentatively had fixed | the county tax rate for 1938 at 52 | cents on each $100 of assessed prop- | ertv valuation. { The low the original requests, cents higher than the current levy. On Tuesday, the Council will convene in formal session to adopt | budgets and fix the levy. | County officials said the current | Yale _ makes no provisions for rebonds and would

tentative rate is 5.6 cents be- | and is 8!

|

have seen at t least 5 cents higher if it did. William Book, Chamber of Com- | merce vice president, objected to | the $200,000 working balance set up in the reques sts

|

THE |

FIRE EATER DEAD BECAUSE OF TRADE

CLEVELAND, Sept. 3. — Dan | Nagyfy, 61-year-old professional | fire-eater at the Great Lakes Expo- | sition, died in a hospital here from | toxic poisoning which doctors said i was caused by chemicals he used in his act. Nagyfy’s epitaph as written | by exposition showmen was: “A| martyr to his art.”

(“and I am glad to see him.

*

From now

today.

on, 7-year-old Leroy going to put tie pins in his mouth. He is shown here recovering in Riley Hospital after one he swalloped when an auto horn frightened him had been removed by surgeons,

HIGHER PRIGES, EXPERT THINKS

Proper Ratiqn Important For Poultry Flocks, Raisers Told.

indication of good eggs this fall, county agri-

With every prices for quality Horace E. Abbott, cultural agent, today advised | poultry raisers to “begin putting | chicken flocks back into production at once.’ Mr. Abbott warned poultry rais- | ers to be careful to feed chickens a balanced ration. “Each year more Marion County

poultrymen have the opportunity to!

| and for this reason care should be | taken to house and feed the poul- | try properly,”

| better for poultrymen to save feed | cost by culling out poor producers

Bannister, Crawfordsville, isn’t

He was reported in good condition

Prefers Sentence

Conditioned on Wite-Support

There was something grim and epic about the troubles of Pete Arnandoff as they unfolded in Municipal Court today,

domitable too.

Pete is 25, swarthy squat, silent and stern.

Michigan St.

Pete mortgaged his truck for $106 ®— -

and deposited the money at a downdown hotel for safe keeping yesterday. The clerk required identification. Pete looked around the lobby, pointed out a man, and said, “He knows me.” The clerk called to Detective Tom Numseck—for it was he—and said, “Do you know this man?” “Yes,” said Detective Numseck, I have

a warrant on a lazy husband charge. iI will take him with me.”

So today Pete appeared before | Municipal Judge Charle J. Kara- | bell. Appearing against him was his wife, Helen, who has two children and is expecting another. Detective Numseck, who manages the West Side Jugo-Slav football | team, spoke a good word for Pete: “He's the best halfback I've got.” Then he added, “But he's a nogood husband. He won't support his

| wife.”

Judge Karabell looked at Pete. “Do you know what it means not to support vour wife, Pete?” he asked sternly.

PICKLED PIG’S EARS USED AS EVIDENCE

By United Press VISALIA, Cal, Sept 3.—The Superior Court was obliged to take un- | der consideration pickled evidence.

to Liberty

And something in-

He lives at 1245 W.

Pete didn't answer. “Do you know what the penalty is for nonsupport?” No answer. “It is 180 days on the Indiana State Farm,” Judge Karabell said. Pete didn’t answer. | Judge Karabell said, “Either you support your wife or I'll give you that sentence.” “Give me the days, Judge,” Pete | said. “You asked for it,” Judge Rarabell | said. “Twenty-five dollars and costs and 180 days on the farm.” Then he softened. “I'll suspend | the sentence if you'll promise to] support her. I'll give you one more chance.” Pete said, “Give me the days, | Judge.” \ The bailiff led him away.

sell their eggs on a graded basis,

he said. i

Mr. Abbott added that it is far |

than to feed an inadequate ration. “Dispose of the small and underdeveloped birds, save only the best stock,” he said.

WIFE DIES TRYING TO RESCUE MATE

BECKLEY, W. Va,, W. Vad Sept. S(U.P). —Mrs. Clifford Statzer, 33, saw her | husband preparing to remove a | 4400-volt wire which had fallen on | their radio aerial. “Don’t touch that wire; you,” she screamed. Statzer, a miner, picked up the wire and was electrocuted. Mrs. Statzer put down her baby | and tried to pull her husband off the wire. She was killed also, s

CHILDREN’S ART WORK SHOWN IN MOSCOW |

| |

| it will kill |

By United Press MOSCOW, Sept. 3.—A permanent | exhibition of children’s arts has| been organized in Moscow this year. More than 5000 exhibits are on display: drawings, sculptures, herb- | ariums, working models of steam engines, ships controlled by radio, electric locomotives—all built by | children.

POLICE WATCH FO FOR FLEEING KIDNAPERS

State and local police today were | asked to look for three men reportled heading hereon U. S. 40 from Springfield, wher they kidnaped a pEyToll dispatcher and later shot down two Springfield policemen. State police said descriptions furnished did not tally with those of | the Al Brady gang. \

jana’s *

tor.

{ quired before a

Is He Lucky P

| Finding 29 | Five-Leaf | Clovers Casts Doubt On Good Omen.

Times Special OONVILLE, Sept. 3.— Jake Bracher, living six miles southeast of here, doesn't know |! whether to expect a lot of good | luck or all bad luck. While walking around a field | at his home yesterday he found 29 five-leaf clovers, he says. He | said he heard much about good luck in finding one such a speci- | men, but finding 29 has him perDiexed, Sea |

EX-KLAN CHIEF

GETS SLIM HOPE

Stenheriion / I" Plans No Immediate Action For Parole. |

LA PORTE, Sept. 3 (U, P.).—Attorney for D. C. Stephenson, Indi- | ‘political prisoner,” who was | | convicted of murdering an Indian- | apolis girl 12 years ago, today de- | nied he is planning immediate ac- | tion seeking parole for the former | | Ku-Klux Klan chieftain. Mayor Alban Smith, attorney for | Stephenson, said a petition for a writ of error is possible in the case, | [but he indicated he is not ready to | take that step. | as |

Mr. Smith had been quoted saying he would attempt to gain a | parole for Stephenson in view of the | statement of Thurman schalk, State Public Welfare direc- | that “prisons are for reform, not punishment.”

Cites Differences in Cases Mr. Gottschalk

| reportedly made | the statement after the parole of | t Virgil Kirkland, 26, convicted in the | death of Arlene Draves, Gary, from

the State Reformatory last week. “While I am interested in the out- | come of the Kirkland case, and more interested in getting my client |

| out of prison, I still don’t see a good |

comparison, in legal standing, in the | two cases,” Mr. Smith said. “In the first place, the charges on | which Stephenson and Kirkland | were convicted are vastly different, | “Secondly, the Clemency Commission recently established a rule that | 15 years in prison would be re- | life-term prisoner | could obtain clemeney.” | Stephenson's prosecution and con- | viction for the murder of Madge | Oberholtzer brought a violent erup- | tion in Indiana political circles. | The Klan chieftain charged he was | “railroaded” to prison and threatened disclosures which would “break” Hoosier political leaders. I

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| The latter consisted of the ears from |a pig which the defendant was al|leged to have killed and which the Court ordered pickled as future exhibits in the case. The ears showed ure pig's Pepisitation number.

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MINT WINDOW BARS CONFUSE PAROLEE

By ted Press DENVER, Sept. 3—Any building THREE with bars on the windows looks lik iq a jail to walter T. Weaver, 18. Waterman, Cal. Noticing bars on the | window of the U. S. Mint here, the youth walked in and “surrendered” | as a parole violator. “I thought It was a jail,” he apologized. “I saw bars on the windows.”

600 DOLLS

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OKLAHOMA CITY, Sept. Sm | Alice would have thought she was | ———— in Wonderland had she attended the fourth annual doll show here, DOG SAVED BY DOG The dolls, about 600, were made of i ——————— nearly everything that a doll could | By United I'ress be made of, including peanuts, wal- | BAD ISCHL, Austria, Sept. 3.— nuts, pipe stems, wax, fur, cloth, | The hero of local dogdom is a little automobile inner tube, tin, soap and | daschund which rescued a fox rice. terrier pup playmate when the

MEMORIES ON VACATION small animal was drowning. CHEYENNE, Wyo, Sept. 3. — Everything from coconuts to wom-=-en’s nightgowns have been left in the postoffice lobby here by absentminded persons. Roast beef, insurance policies, blankets, school report cards, a safety razor and a | sack of flour are included among | the forgotten articles.

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