Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 6 February 1941 — Page 12

Te i hii PURSTIAY. FEE 6 LIST ) BOALS nN Farm Boy. 16, Charged With Second Slaying

_TEXARKANA, Ark., Feb. 6 (U./night, police charged. Hilliard girls” and of telling that he had PJ) ~—A. L. Tipton, a mild-manp-|went to a friend’s home and died. [obtained the keys to the Fouke 16-year-old farm bof, was Tipton, after admitting that he{general store and intended to raid charged today with his second ni hit goung Hilliard, said: ifig. a 3 a “I'm sorty. But that’s a bunch| They began to call each other ‘He ed .a man and wounded|of tough boys qut there, and you've| names, he said, and young Hilliard indiana Is Now 60 Per Cent Se with a shotgun in Scotts-|got to stand up for yourself.” invited him’ outside. , Industrial, Townsend

when he was 12, and| He accused the Hilliard boy ‘of| “I picked up the bottle when. I Tells Civic Group. ~ |15-vear-old schoolmate, with a poplin the Fouke Iigh School gym-|on the head,” he told Sheriff W. EB

NEW LERGIE OF| Planned Use o

NATIONS URGED

2 Treasurer, in U. S. I Draft " Plans, Blames Old - - For 1936 Failures.

{it as soon as; the game over.

he ay John Dale Hilliard, his|cursing him at a basketball _game|saw he had a club and socked him

EX

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io

‘determined league as the only prac-

NEW YORK, Feb. 6 (U. P.).—Seymour Jacklin, treasurer of the League of Nations since 1927, said today that the League bore a large , Share of the responsibility for the ‘ present war because its members failed to apply stringent military and economic sanctions against Italy and Germany in 1936. . Jacklin, here for conferences with League officials of - the United| States and Canada, said League personnel in America, Europe and Asia was gathering information for a post-war rebuilding of a strong and

tical means of peacetime collaboration among nations. “The nations have learned their fesson from "this war,” he said. “They how know that economic sanctions without military sanctions are not feasible.” , Jacklin said the league's re-estab-lishment is predicted upon a British victory. All nations will be welcome in the post war league, he asserted. Jacklin said he was ‘‘certain”

~ Britain’ would win the war.

Fr

Suite Special

Federal and State Planing’ officials and members of the Indiana Roadside Council find a comfhon objective in land-use regulation proposed by the Indiana Civic Association at the: Claypool Hotel yester~day. In this discussion group are (left to right) Frederic A. Delano, chairman of the National Resources

Planning Board; Mrs. T. Eugene Bailey of Romney and Miss Lillian Marsh of Ft. Wayne, officers of the Indiana Roadside Council, and Col. Richard Lieber, vice_ president of the American Planning and Civic

Association.

Lime Oak Bedroom

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This Large, Comfortable

technical and Somewhat vispaty idea. Practical planning and zoning existed only in cities and tqwns where land use was restricted to preserve property values. As for the state as a whole, there was still plenty of room for the unrestricted development of public, and private enterprises. Yesterday at the Indiana Civic Association meeting at the Claypool Hotel, the -visionary and practical aspects met in a proposal to plan the use of every acre of land in Indiana in the interest of national defense industrial expansion. -

Idea Is Not New \ As a vision, the idea is not new.

State Planning Board ' which has barely . functioned since its funds were stripped from it two years and which is now threatened with extinction by the Legislature. As a practicality, the idea hit with a thud at the Association’s meeting. State and Federal officials put statewide planning on thé defense necessity list. They said that planned use of Indiana’s broad acres now becomes a necessity with the transition of the state into an ever growing industrial center. In such places as

dustry is mushrooming. Former Governor M. - Clifford

County plan officials at the meet-

save a few miles. Yet we hesitate

ourselves from an agricultural to an industrial state. “The State of Indiana is now 60 per cent industrial. Billions of dollars’ worth of industry have come here with war expansion.

Regulation Needed

regulate areas near industrial sites to insure orderly expansion.

for the end of the defense emer-

need it soon.” A five-point program was outlined to the Association by Lawrence V. Sheridan, regional counselor here

Board. The program

State Plan Commission. 2. Creation of a “shelf” of pufilic improvement projects in a master plan for the state. All state devel-

in a position to afford them. Land Pattern Urged

trial development and creation of a pattern of land use that would enable incoming industry to determine the best locations. 4. The co-ordination of all public

other projects by a State Plan Board with full powers to control developmen

on Ao state-wide basis. Sheridan’s last point was a Te objective of yesterday’s session. To provide such a movement, the Indiana Civic Association was organized with the co-operation of Purdue University, Federal planning officials and four state organizations. Only four months old, the Association succeeded in attracting more than 200 City and County officials to its meeting plus ‘representatives of the Indiana Roadside Council, the Indiana Federation of Clubs, the Indiana Real Estate Association and State Conservation Clubs,

‘Schricker Speaker

The one-day session ended with a dinner at the Claypool last night. Speakers included Governor Henry F. Schricker, Lieut.- Gov. ‘Charles M. Dawson, Hassil B. Schenck, Indiana Farm Bureau president; Frederic A. Delano, National Resource Board chairman; Dr. H. H. Bennett, U. 8. Soil Conservation chief; Dr. Burton D. Meyers, Indiana University dean, and Mesdames O. A. Ahlgren and Pearl Vernon of the Roadside Council.

Railne wT: Z |

CRN I

Tired Kidneys

It has been the objective of the|S

Charlestown and Union Center, in-|S Townsend told assembled city and - ing: : “We think “nothing of spending :

$300,000 for a ‘highway bridge to|c to spend a fraction of that to bridge E

“Our first problem is to make it|S possible for this industry to op-|S erate in efficient locations, to|S plan housing for boom towns and |Z “Our next problem is to prepare |= gency. We need planning in this|g

state to guard against the hazards|E of haphazard expansion. And we]:

for the National Resources Planning |=

1. The defeat of a bill in the|E Legislature which would abolish the |S

opment would proceed according to |: the master plan when the state was|#

+ 3. Long term planning of Mmdus-|Z

improvements, parks, highways and |:

5. Creation of a citizens’ move-|g ment supporting the planning idea :

+ BASEMENT

bottle in Fouke, Ark, Ehiesday nasium “in front of .a bunch of!Davis. Only 10 years ago, planning the | [il hi [use of land in Indiana was a highly | fit

Nid Bi

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