Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 27 August 1940 — Page 10
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COUNTY STUDIES HOME PURCHASE
Item to Buy Guardian's Building Removed From Budget Tentatively.
The County Council today agreed | tentatively to remove from the County Commissioners’ budget al $20,000 item for the proposed pur- |
: . teen] chase of a Children’s Guardian | Home.
The action followed criticism of] the proposed expenditure at the | Council's budget hearings. ; Carl Dorteh, Indianapolis ‘Chamber of Commerce representative, urged councilmen to strike the proposal from the budget, asserting it would be merely another “white elephant.” Mr. Dortch said that it would be | better either to take the children | out of the present rented detention | home and-put them in foster homes, | or to place them in some other in- | stitutions such as the unused] Colored Orphans’ Home and unused | portions of the Children’s Guardian | Home. The Colored Orphans’ Home is being used temporarily by the NYA| while a large portion of the Guar-| dian Home is not being used at present. Councilmen decided that if further study revealed the home should be acquired, it could be paid for by! bond issue Councilmen,
|
who began an
until their and 4
formal sessions Sept.
mission to the County ment Board. {
The county budgets as advertised 24, of tax rate!/Cagle, 21, of Palmyra, Ill, The present! here pending charges.
would call for a property of $52.47 cents in 1941, rate is 49 cents. {
P.) —Arthur in- | County prosecutor, formal study of the nearly $6,000,000 the Grand Jury sought by county office holders for|called for Thursday to consider in1941, will not make any definite cuts|dictments against two 3 | allegedly ing of Walter Ebeling, 31-year-old Ebeling July 9 after robbing him At that time the Council will fix New York German theater operator . ¢gqthe 1941 county tax rates for sub-|who disappeared Tax Adiust-|month.
in Murder
Jury Called ir
Mervyn Cagle (left) and Richard Klowetter . . . held in slaying of theater manager.
SOUTH BEND, Ind, Aug. Scheer, St.
said today session would
have admitted the
near here
The youths,
Niles, Mich.
Meanwhile Superintendent
27 (| State Police Don F. Stiver Joseph that
ouths oh Noblesville, Ind., Sunday,
last |
Richard Klowetter,
of |
said at Indianapolis that first degree murder charges, under which they could be | 2€ sentenced to death if convicted, be! would be filed against them. Klowetter admitted to police at where he was arrested, that he had shot He implicated Cagle. He signed a confession here last night, officers claimed. Ebeling’s body was found yester-
and Mervin| 4, ¢ by officials of Berrien County, were held |
{ Michigan, and South Bend police. It was returned to South Bend last joe. .
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TROOPS RETURN T0 BASE CAMP
Complete Extensive Maneuver Ahead of Schedule in Rain and Mud.
CAMP M’'COY, SPARTA, Wis, Aug. 27 (U.P).—The Second Army returned to base camp today after completing one day ahead of schedule extensive maneuvers which included a sham battle in rain and! mud. { Lieut. Gen. Stanley H. Ford ordered battle lines of the Fifth Corps units, representing an invad- |
{Western defenders withdrawn late | | vesterday after the technical sitha- | tion had been developed fully. (units had been living since Saturday noon. When the battle closed, [fending Red Army had attacked along its entire front, forcing back | the invading Blue Army Severe. miles from an Sdvinesd positi gained Sunday. A salient thee ea had forced four miles into the Red line was pinched off between Red units adv ancing on three sides.
OWNS 1862 BISCUIT LUVERNE, Ala, Aug. 27 (U. P). —W, what is believed to be the world’s oldest biscuit. The biscuit was
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STORMY BUDGET
Party Forces Clash in City, Council but Figures Are Unchanged.
City Council's tug-o’-war over the 1941 budget continued today, with Republicans weakening in their economy fight after an angry clash
ing army from the South, and the [looked at the clock: Sixth Corps units representing the | They decided it was about time to
The | as per schedule. in the field |
the de- |
D. Hudgins of Luverne owns
| American
with Democr®ts last night, As of today, the proposed City | ‘budget for next year still stands | lat the requested $8,000,000. Not a penny has been cut. Council has reviewed almost three quarters of [the two-volume table of expendi- | tures. Members plan to complete the budget study tonight in order to] |be prepared for the public hearing | at 8 p. m. tomorrow. The hearing | (will be held in the City Council | Chamber at City Hall. Republican opposition to increases in the Safety and Health Depart- | ments rose to the highest pitch of | | the week-long budget study last | | night, ending in a verbal free-for- | ‘all. The battle followed an oral | exchange between Harmon A. | | Campbell, Republican Councilman, and Dr. Herman G. Morgan, Health Officer, over the health budget.
Leaves It to Democrats
Mr. Campbell charged that Dr. | Morgan refused to explain in-| creases. Dr. Morgan denied the charge. Mr. Campbell reiterated, | Dr. Morgan reiterated. Finally, Guy Ross, Democrat, rose | to his feet and shouted: “I'm sick and tired of this argu-| ment. I'm going home.” But he sat back down. There | was silence for a moment. Then | Mr. Campbell spoke in a still, small | voice: * “There isn't any use, I guess, for| us Republicans to pretend to cut| this budget, because we know we can't. I propose that we quit right | now. You Democrats can pass it! the way you want it. Let's go home and go to bed.” Foresees G. O. P. Victory | Democrats shouted their opposi- |
tion to this proposal. “You can do what you like,” said Albert O. Deluse, Council's Democratic budget chairman. “We're go-| ing to complete this study. It's oe responsibility to the public.” Mr. Campbell observed that the | Republican minority had a respon- | sibility, too,—~to “49 per cent of the! taxpayers.” { Then he added: “And it will be 55 per cent of the! taxpayers after the November elec-! tion.” And So—Home to Bed
“That little political speech,” re- | torted Mr. Deluse, “leaves me colder | than the Abyssinian national an- | them.” At about that point, the members 11:30 p. m.|
go home, even without finishing | consideration of the Health budget| They filed out of the chamber, wearily, into the elevator, The only visible result of their labors was a litter of stubs on the
| floor,
CLAIMS N NEW DE DEAL | HAMPERS DEFENSE
NEW YORK, Aug. 27 (U. P.). — Governmental “business baiting” is hampering the national defense pro-| gram and preventing economic re-| covery, according to Gen. Hugh S.| Johnson, former NRA Administrator. Speaking at the opening session of the 35th annual convention of the| National Retail Jewelers | Association here last night, Gen.| Johnson declared that the Washing- | ton Administration has expressed | the “gravest doubts” as to the per- |
[manent value of this country’s eco- | nomic system. “It has done much to discredit its | leaders, to check and throttle it even |
' in this hour when the safety of our|
YA #4 41 3
country depends on its furious and
{| most efficient effort,” he said.
“The Government is almost ex-|
1 clusively officered by men who have | neither any close sympathy with aor
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‘SIT-DOWN’ PONDERED BY SCALISE COUNSEL
NEW YORK, Aug. 27 The Scalise of charges of having stolen | $60,087 from the Building Service! Employees International Union de- | cides today whether to “sit out”
(U, P).—
{the rest of the trial in pros] | | against the admission of testimony |
linking Scalise with gangsters. A story told yesterday by Isidore! Schwartz, a local union official un-
| der indictment for extortion, charg- |
ing that Scalise *took his’ orders | from known gangsters, brought vio- | lent objections from Defense At- | torney Martin W, Littleton. Failing | to obtain a mistrial, Mr, Littleton | obtained a recess and said he! wanted to spend the night “think- | ing over an important decision.” It was believed he planned to refuse to cross-examine any more State witnesses, or offer any defense evidence, and to stake his case on the chance that a high court would reject the State testimony on appeal.
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THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
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