Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 27 May 1941 — Page 20
Sx ~ was $14,787,611.
til after the ruling.
_ ~ the bombing had abated but the
_ Pngineers ofdered us back to the which Australian |-
Eo ‘their Bren gun carriers had been
PAGE 20
BOARD BOOSTS |
UTILITY VALUES)
aq elephone and Water Co. “Assessments Raised by State Tax Unit.
The State Tax Board has inereased the assessed valuation of the Indiana Bell Telephone Co. and the ‘State properties of its parent company, American Telephone & Tele-
i r b i
graph, more than $2,500,000 over the |
1940 valuation of the two companies. ° Valuations velng set now for utilities and railroads will determine the . amount of taxes payable by them next year. State Board officials declined to give reasons for any change in the valuations but it was reported that the increase in the two telephone companies was due to more property and increased earnings.
Water Co. Increased
The total assessed valuation of fhe Indiana Bell Telephone Co. was fixed at $41,276,732. The 1940 figure was $39,708,935, an increase of more than $1,500,000. The assessed valuation of the State properties of the American Telephone & Telegraph was fixed at $20,845,845. "The total figure for A. T. & T. last year was $19,830,816. . The assessed valuation of the Indianapolis Water Co. was increased approximately $150,000 by Marion County assessments. The 1941 total for the; company was fixed at $14,934,670. The 1940 total
Postal Value Cut
The 1941 Marion County assessment of the Water Co., which is included in the State total, was $2,212,670 while the County assessment for last year was $2,065,611. The only decrease reported by the Tax Board today was for the Postal fPelegraph Co. The 1941 assessed valuation was fixed at.$309,810, a decrease of approximately $15,000 from the 1940 figure. The valuation of the Western Union Telegraph Co. was increased slightly, the 1941 figure being set at $4,013,246. Last year’s total was . $4,011,702. Publie utilities who disagree with the valuations fixed by the St Board may appeal and rece a. hearing at sessions of the Tax ‘Board beginning July 8. They ‘must make applications for the appeal, however, before June 28. Board members said the new assessed valuations of light and power CO! nies would be announced tomorrow.
TWO FOUND GUILTY IN TAVERN ATTACK
Emanuel Lorraine, E. Washington St. tavern operator, and Roy Woods were found guilty of assault and ~ pattery with intent to murder in Criminal Court today. i and Woods Were convicted of Severely beating Hampton Williams inthe Larraine tavern last | Nov. 22. Joseph Williams, a third . defendant in the case, was found not guilty Judge Pro Tem Clyde Carter took under advisement a defense motion for arrest of judgment. Wcods and Lorraine will not be sentenced un-
at]:
: | that
“THE 'INDPANAPOLIS TIMES :
RUSSELL NAMED
TO ASSIST BLUE
25-Year Veteran Assigned By Chief at Request Of Prosecutor.
Police Chief Michael F. Morrissey today assigned Charles J. Russell, a 25-year veteran of the Police Department as special investigator for the office of County: Prosecutor Sherwood Blue. The Chief's appointment was approved by the Safety Board and was made at ‘the request of Mr. Blue who said “The death of Miss Hatch Sunday night emphasizes the desirability ‘of having a member of the Prosecutor's staff co-operate
t | with investigating officers of the
Police Department to co-ordinate the work of Police with the Prosecuting authorities.” Changes His Mind For many yegrs the Prosecutor’s office has had a police officer on its staff, but last January, a few weeks after Mr. Blue took office, he asked Detective John Dugan, a Democrat, then on the Prosecutor’s staff, be returned to the Police Department, “in the interést of econ-
: perv
Georgia Xenos, 12, of Chicago, gets expert help on studies from her big sister, Joanna Xenos (right), who is quite a “whiz” at school, having graduated from grammar school at 7, high school at 13, and will soon graduate from Mundelein College at 17. :
EX-TREASURER ATHUNTINGTON JAILED
HUNTINGTON, Ind.. May-27 (U. P.).—Mrs. Pauline Fairchild, former Huntington County Treasurer, and her one-time deputy, James G. Lawver, today faced a series of indictments charging them with embezzlement of public funds. The Huntington County Sheriff's office said Mrs. Fairchild had failed to make $15,000 bond and was being held in jail. Lawver was released under $4000 bond.
dictments against Mrs. Fairchild, alleging embezzlement of $22,280.92. Lawver was indicted on charges of embezzlement, grand larceny and perjury. Mrs. Fairchild became Treasurer following the death of her husband in ‘1935. She was elected in 1936 and again in 1938.
Loses Trousers
To Glib Stranger
ELKHART, Ind., May 27 (U.P). —Police today sought a glib stranger who talked Morris Chapman, Sturgis, Mich. out ‘of his trousers, shirt, wrist watch and $2.50 in cash. Offering the 16-year-old Chapman a job as a truck driver, the stranger convinced him that the cash was necessary for. “union dues” and that the youth must exchange his wardrobe for the stranger’s work clothes so that he wouldn’t look “too well dressed
for the job.”
Nazi 'Chutists Floated Down,
‘Some Burning,
Some Shooting
By RICHARD D, McMILLAN
United Press Staff Correspondent
ALEXANDRIA, Egypt, May 26
(Delayed). —A British soldier back
from. Crete told today of Sten invaders bailing out of burning trans-
port planes and crashing
flames. Sometimes the shrouds burned
earth as their parachutes dissolved in
and the men fell. free of the para-
chutes, to be crushed to death on impact with the ground. Sometimes
‘the men’s clothes as well as their parachutes were ignited and these may have burned to death in the air. . The soldier said he saw one plane with six or seven. parachutists dangling from it, crash into the sea. Others who escaped the ground fire of the Crete defenders floated down gently in black and white parachutes, firing sub - machine guns 2ll the way. The bullets spattered against roofs of houses and wounded civilians in the streets. *Chutists All Around The soldier, one of the first to reach here with an eye-witness account of the Crete battle, was in a contingent surrounded by German parachutists at Candia, near Malemi, where the Germans established their first aerial bridge‘head. “Early in the morning of May 2,” the soldier said, ‘dive bombers at- . tacked in waves, and parachutists . dropped all around us. By mid-day
machine-gunning was worse. “The English garrison commander ordered us to leave the town. We split into two parties and started for the sea. We were machineed all the way. “We could Planes 30 to 40 feet above the water. ey came nine at a time, heading for the town. Suddenly the planes were encircled by anti-aircraft fire. By afternoon, 10 of them had been shot down in flames. . .. © “At the beach a captain of Royal
(Candia) fort, and New Zealand troops were ‘holding. Instead, we got a small boat, found some Very signal pistols and went to Naafi for some provisions. We learned later that we would have been cut off if we had returned to the fort. We could see the invaders, garbed in battle dress, from where we stood in the beach. Soon, 23 of the Aussies joined us. They said
© cut off in the fort. “By evening we could hear civiljans in the town being wounded by machine gun fire. Then the Ger-
mans fired into the harbor at our
‘boats. About that time the -anti- ~ aircraft gunners ran out of ammu- ~. nition. : Found by Cruiser ~~ «we got around the harbor in the boats, keeping in sight of land and taking turns at rowing. - We forbade anyone to talk or light matches. Three hours later we ‘heard the drone of engines. . Two destroyers approached anda cruiser ‘threw a searchlight on us and trained its guns in our direction. “1 shouted, ‘we are English, sir’ “What are You doi going here,’ the Sapigh veg
see troop-carrying|
“<All right, pull in alongside.’ “Thirteen of us got in one destroyer. Others boarded other destroyers. Bombed for 9 Hours
“The next day there were two or three bombing raids. In the evening we cruised around looking for
an invasion fleet between the Dode-
canese Islands and. Crete but all was quiet. “The next morning we were bombed by waves of raiders. We interceptéd barges trying: to get through to Crete, and tipped them over by blasts from our pompom guns. I saw Germans and Italians in the water, their faces black with fuel oil. “An Italian cruiser ran up a white flag just as one our shells hit it. Germans and Italians were yelling for help and there was wreckage all over the place, The Germans bombed. us continuously for nine hours. At mid-day we met a convoy.”
The Grand Jury returned five in=.
And England,
WASHINGTON, May 27 (U. P.).— There will be no need for “meatless, breadless or sugarless” days during this wan because American farmers can produce all the food needed to give the United States an adequate diet and have enough left over to meet Great Britain's
needs, Secretary of Agriculture Claude R. Wickard told the National Nutrition Conference today. Huge stores of surplus foods already on hand can be speedily re-
N. SIDE REALTORS SELL 18 HOUSES
North Side Realtors, a division of the Indianapolis Real Estate Board, this week reported sale of 18 houses, eight lots and one suburban tract. A total sales value of $141,925 brought the year’s sales to $2,439,751 which represented ‘a gain of $559,341 over the same period of 1940. Houses sold were: 953 N. Oakland Ave. 555 N. Parker Ave. 364 N. Cgle St., 80th St. and Evanston Ave.*and 242 Blue Ridge Road, by Jack C. Carr; 4929 Schoffield Ave.
Harryman; 6217 N. Delaware St. by Fieber & Reilly; 1106 N. Tremont St. and: 3407 Carrollton Ave: by William G. Albershardt; 5272 N. Pennsylvania St. by American Estates Co.; 4454 Central Ave., 5716 Washington Blvd., 5602 N. Delaware St. by Warren Atkinson; 6175 N. Pennsylvania St. by Thomas PF. Carson; 5231 Broadway by ‘John Elam, and 6109 Indianola Ave. by B. L. Edwards. Lot sales were: One in Indian{ola Lake and one in Fall Creek Highlands by Mr. Harryman; one in Brockton by John Robbins: one in Northclift by R. E. Peckham: one in Sherwood Village by Mr. Atkinson; one in Sylvan Estates by William Bridges; one in Williams Creek by Fay C. Cash and Fieber & Reilly. Mr. Carr sold five acres in A-View Addition.
AMERICAN BEARING GETS $162,000 JOB
Times Special - WASHINGTON, May 27. — The American Bearing Co., Indianapolis, has been awarded a $162,976 contract for bearings, the Navy Department announced today. Army contracts announced for Indiana by the War Department in-| cluded: Ely Lilly Co., Indianapolis, drugs, $9472; General American Transportation Corp., East Chicago, box cars, $12,803; Sullivan . Machinery Co., Michigan City, parts for air compressors, $5353; Mishawaka Rubber & Woolen: Manufacturing Co, Mishawaka, 129 pairs of shoe pacs, $528; Maxon Premix Burner Co., Muncie, gas burners, $5457, and Bantam Bearings Corp. South
Bend, roller bearings, $1700.
SAVE MONEY
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Food Stocks Ample for U. S.
Says Wickard
plenished under the Administration’s flexible farm program to meet any emergency, Mr. Wickard told the 900 food experts; food production can be planned to meet future needs just as efficiently as a factory can plan its production to meet orders.
The conference was called by President Roosevelt to develop an “action program” to assure that the nation will be well-fed fo meet the stress of all-out production for defense of the democracies. Reports to the conference showed that 45,000,000 persons are on a ‘slow starvation” diet that makes them susceptible to disease and impairs their efficiency. in defense production. Only one in four families has a good diet.
Vice President Henry A. Wallace told the conference last night that the nation is approaching a “real new order” based on physical wellbeing, equal opportunity and freedom of the soul and not on the basis of “fear, compulsion and slavery.” :
He proposed a three-part program as the goal of the conference: 1. Complete elimination of ‘“thousands of deaths” caused by dietary deficiency; 2. A great reduction in those diseases which gain headway because of malnutrition, and 3. Give everyone in the United States “health plus” feeling by making available proper diets to all. “The existing policies of the Department of Agriculture are definitely in line with a great national nutrition program such as this conference is considering.” Mr. Wickard said in a speech prepared for delivery this morning.
“At that time I thought we could get along without a police officer, but I have decided that there :s need for more co-ordination in investigation work between my office and the Police Department,” Blue explained. Detective Dugan served in the Prosecutor’s office during the terms of former Prosecutors David M.
Democrats. Iatter of Custom Officer Russell, who is a Republican, was selected, Mr. Blue said, “because of his many years’ experience in police work.” The Police Department is not bound by law to furnish the Prosecutor’s office with an officer but it has been done on a mutual understanding basis to prevent overlapping of investigation work. Chief Morrissey also is not obligated to assign the particular officer requested by the Prosecutor, but this policy has been followed in the past because the investigator must take orders from the Prosecutor. . Officer Russell joined the police
Lewis and Herbert M. Spencer, both
force in 1916, became traffic officer in- 1923 and was a detective sergeant from 1926 to 1935. At present he is on a North Side beat. He was wounded while chasing a criminal several years ago and his father, also a police officer, was killed in the line of duty. Chief Morrissey would make the assignment if and when the Safety Board approves it.
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TUESDAY, MAY 27, 1941
Funeral Directors
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Legals Furniture Buyers Help Wanted—Female ...eoccecesosscee 8 Help Wanted—Male HOUBIS viiveviviovivaine sesecs00eentossens 16 Housekeeping Rooms 117 Houses and Lots for Sale....ccccvciees 25 Houses for Rent House Trailers
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Ta Deaths-—Funerals : 1
Indainapolis Times, Tuesday, May 27, 041
ON — Stella Lucille, 1558 Haynes beloved wife of Donald, of Donald Jr., Harvey, Kenneth, Leroy Blanton, daughter of Mrs. Suzan Clark, sister of am, Elmer and Louise ‘Clark, Sr this life. saturday: age By Funeral Wednesday. May 28, the e & Kirk North East ‘Funeral a 25% "Station St.. 10 a. m. Burial Sutherland Park Cemetery. Friends invited.
FULLER—Leah Jane, widow of Jacob. mother of Mrs. Elsie Arnold and Mrs, Clara Collier. Mrs. Bertha Lee, Charles, Perry, Ira. Howard. and Everett Fuller. sister of Willard Oliver and Otis Snider, departed this life Mondav. age 81. Funeral Thursday. May 29th at residence, 24 S. Vine St.. 1:30 p. m. Burial Friends invited. Moore &
‘Kirk Service.
GILWORTH--Marion CG. of 1817 Nowland .. beloved husband of Mayme Gilworth and father of Robert Gilwortk, son of Mrs. Minnie Gilworth and brother mn Leslie Gilworth. departed ine life Sunday. Ifuneral Tuesday. 8 p. ‘Moore & Kirk Lvington Mortuary, 5342 BE. Washington 1 Wednesday ‘at the Shoals Chtiatian “Ohtirch. ‘Burial Shoals. Friends invited.
HOWARD--Ethel May, > years, mother of Michael and * of Lo Hancock,
Han ed a oo ar] 3s m ass aw! onda XM. Funeral ‘riiursday. 2 Y ioe as, the 'G. H, Herrmann Fune ome, 8. 8t. Priends ead, Burial Crow Hill. Friends may call after 6 p. m. Tuesday
BRAMER-—Hethert B., husband of Janet L. Kramer, father of Shirley Marie, Herbert B. Tr and James Richa Kramer, son of Mrs. J. Lave ‘brother of Mis. Clvde Wright and Miss Ruth of George
half-brother
beloved ald
le Ry . Philip Friends may’ er “at the
Neri Church. home. NATION. Corbett. O Grove, of 1901 Park, be-
f Margaret Nation, fad Roxanna Nation.
ne! 0! orthin ngton In ends ay call at Moore & Kirk North
lege 51 Boe Wedn iBioomnaid. an d Worthington
papers ay enon wa ALREN Melissa, ssa. 78 years sonst ite
Walden. mather
| 1934 W. Michigan St.
2130 Prospect St
12|8.8
CONKLE FUNERAL HOME
BE-1934
- FLANNER & BUCHANAN
23 WwW. PALL CREEK BLVD. - TA-3371.
~* BERT S. GADD
MA -6049
GRINSTEINER'S
1601 E. NEW YORK PERSONAL SERVICE
G. H. HERRMANN
1503 8. EAST ST. MA-8438
HISEY & TITUS
MORTUARY #81 N. DELAWARE ST. . 11-3828
MOORE & KIRK
(R-1150. CH-1806 TA-6086.
SHIRLEY BROS. CO. L1-8400
48 N. Nlinois
USHER MORTU ARY
2318 W. Washington St.
J. C. WILSON
1230 Prospect St.
MA-5374
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PIRES
2922 N. DELAWARE TA 4568
PEONIES, 25¢ DOZEN — All colors. 3700 Bluff Road, GA-1153.
Florists & Monuments
7
’S Elgin 22-diamond EE ancroft or Emerson and Michigan. Liberal reward. IR-3463. LADY'S RIMLESS GLASSES; GOLD MOUNTING. REWARD. GA-3421.
Lost and Found
LOST —-— Lad watch on
Help Wanted—Female 8
WHITE LADY—25 to 30, care of 2 children, go home night. Eastside home. BL-0797 after 5:30 p. m.
WHITE GIRL for general housework, on place; Experience necessary, $7.
stay BR-
nec-
WAITRESS—Tavern, experience: not oe
essary. Single, steady position, Main, Beech Grove.
ELDERLY lady to care for baby; with Nousewerk all mornings. Fernway
HUSBAND with job 2nd wife strong, partme help: (white, middle -aged), for _ room, uti ities. 1524 College. WAITRESS and general restaurant work, 18-25. Must be neat and clean; 6 days; $7. 1424 Nordyke.
GIRL win Laundry experience, Washingt
Er waiirels: 3 week. White rr Tavern, 3729 W
mm’ ad in The LI costs as 16c ver day AND produces RESULTS. Phone RI-5551 between and 0. m.
“help 2038
439 W.
“Room thle as QU ice
Help Wanted—Male 9
Wanted Newspaper Boys
OVER 14 YEARS OF AGE TO
SELL PAPERS DECORATION DAY at the INDIANAPOLIS SPEEDWAY TRACK
APPLY IMMEDIATELY —MR. LLOYD
INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
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TOOL MAKERS FIRST CLASS ONLY FOR PRECISION WORK
Only men oa able of hananng preShion york will be considered. an offer ead work. good were: with overti good working conditions to steady men of proven ability. Men not meeting the shove Tequiremenis need not apply Ray Rice or Ronnie Updike any gay om 7:30 a. m. to 6 p. m., except
av, TY “Toor, AND DIE CO. re 401 N. Noble St.
wanted for established bakery
Salesmen—Agents
SALESMEN routes located in Indianapolis. Married men preferred. No experience necessay. We train you for a SHnanens pos tion 52 weeks a year wit ar= d salary a fiberal coming ssion or Unlimited on ortunities for men Yio qualify. bond necessary pply FREIHHOFER BAKING CO.. 656 ew Jersey, 3-6 p. m. IKE’S LOAN OFFICE We loan on anything. 2 night £1 tit 2 nig wai 0933 Va. Ave. YOUNG BOY-~Clerk to paint and Jing. eum store. Salar Hoosier Paint & Sinem. ati E. Wash, MAN «who can stuff and nail metal case brooms. Stratton Broom Co.. 1556 Deloss St. 25 MEN i sell Tefreshments, grandstand, Specdway May N. Davidson, after 7 Dp. ). m. EXPERIENCED driver for dry cleaning® truck on East Side. CH-1207. Shoemaker. Call 5172 College. EXPERIEI IENCED salesmen in men’s furnis ings a and shoes. - Apply at once. Zuckerberg’s, 1001 S. Meridian.
Positions Wanted, Female 10
HOME laundry or curtains: 10c _stri ir yashed and stretched. BE-3920-J. 329
HOUSECLEANING — RI-1663. Positions Wanted—Male 11
TRUCK for hire; 1% ton bed, 7x12 ft.
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Schools & Instructions 12
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& DYE CLINIC EVERY WED.
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MELE IL
MEYER O
