Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 26 February 1942 — Page 14
Says, but Morrissey Denies Conflict, |
Roderic H. Rae, who for six years
y of the police de
1 ving the post, where he | had pained considerable recognition in
Ig a8 disagreement over’ a | Tepoit the investigation of a eriminal
Chief Morrissey ‘denied that there as any conflict between him and Mr. Rae over technicalities of labpratory work, explaining that Mr. Rae left the post as the result of js own intention to retire pecatse of| his health. ————————— MODERN LINK TO PAST BALLSTON SPA, N, Y. (U. P)— Not a member arrived on horse-
"LEAVES 3 FORE !
Dismissed, Crime Expert
s headed the eefininolosy labors 2
Helped Register 250
back for the annual meeting of [f
Ballston Spa. society for the detec~|
b n of horse thieves. All armived in obiles.
Shirley Vansickls, Mary Eleanor Ward and Ruth Mowry eft to right) * oso they're handling the registration books.
Childs Colds
Tested
A PAIR OF “LAWLESS” COPS DENVER (U. P.) —Private James
His father is a city policeman
ICKS Lawless is a military: policeman here.
VaroR UB in Frinceton, N. J.
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. and speaking of a lottery vee
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Warren Township 4-H Club Preparing for Their Part in Defense.
The girls of Warren township want to find out about gardening. And if figures at hand mean anything (which they do), the people of Warren are going to be seeing better gardens next summer. Of 250 girls who have been enrolled in the Warren township 4-H club this year, gardening is first on the preference list.
Baking Takes Sugar
Food preparation and canning are high on the list, but the 4-H people think baking will suffer a setback. As patriotic citizens, the girls know that baking takes lots of sugar. Assisting Shirley Vansickle, Mary Eleanor Ward and Ruth Mowry. in enrolling girls for the 4-H are: Joyce Kuper, Marie Dill, Estel Fivecoat, Helen . Jennings, Mildred Eileen Piel, Lila Brady, Betty Goddard, Betty West, Mary. Mowry, Adeline Roy, Mary McNeal, Eleanor Mithoefer, Loraine Mithoefer, Alice Springer,’ Barbara Trotter, Gayle Rumford, = Betty Archer, Ann Sloan, Anita Case, Barbara Plymate, Fredia Schmalfeldt, Esther Schalfeldt.
Other Assistants
Martha Vance, Gertrude Clark, Jane, - Featherstone, Mary Eloise Wulf, Esther Connard, Dorothy Schwier, Irma Piel, Carolyn Piel, Phylis Lasley, Inez Eickhoff, Charmon Means, Dorothy Peters, Margaret Hudson, Betty Butler, Eleanor Mercer and Eileen Pollard.
LONG LOST TEETH FOUND
CADILLAC, Mich. (U." P).— Mrs. Susie Boyce of Hobart lost her false teeth 35 years ago. The other day she got them back. A neighbor, Ray Loomis, found them in
his potato patch.
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‘| hundred forty-two billion, five mil-
i|lars! Or, in figures, 5142.00.35»
VAST WAR SUMS STAGGER HOUSE
Astronomical Figures Make| |
Some Wonder if Money
Can Be Spent.
Times Special Writer i WASHINGTON, Feb. 26~One
lion, three hundred fifty-four thousand, six hundred and’ thirteen dol-
613. That is the titantic, iboompre= hensible sum that congress will have appropriated when it has approved —as it certainly will — not only the bills and budget estimates before it for the war and navy departments and maritime commission, but also the nearly seven billion dollars still required .to be appropriated after 1943 to complete the two-ocean navy. $142,005,354,613! It covers appropriations for three fiscal years—1941, 1942, 1943. That is, the period from July 1, 1940, to June 30, 1943.
Passed by House
So vast is this sum that house members asked army officers how and if the money could be spent. The questioning came in connection with the last great segment of this amount, the bill appropriating $32,070,901,900 (including $2,350,000,000 in contractual authority) for the war and navy department, maritime commission: and lendlease administration. This bill, passed by the house without dissent, will soon be passed by the senate. The constitution, in empowering | congress to appropriate for national defense, says: “Congress shall have power . . . to raise and support armies, but no appropriation of money to’ that use shall be for a longer term than two years.” It also says that “Congress shall have tthe power . . . to provide and maintain a navy.”
Ruling Recalled
It is evident that the constitution puts a limitation on appropriations for the army, but not for the navy. However, an attorney general ruled in Spanish-American : war days (and ‘the: ruling is still. in force) that the -two-vear limitation applies only to army pay, shelter, clothing, subsistence and the like, and does not apply to munitions. And congress has added its interpretations, under” which the expenditure of an appropriation may be extended over three fiscal years. The . appropriations ‘committee did not say so; but our actual expenditures now are running about $2,000,000,000 a month, and climbing. General Has No Doubts The committee was naturally concerned about whether if ‘it approved this last vast $32,000,000,000 bill the money could be spent. Maj.. Gen. R. C. . Moore, deputy chief of staff, was asked if the war department's share of this sum— $22,000,000,000—was being sought merely on a contingent basis, or whether the department could “definitely see right now .an immediate and specific need for it.” Gen. Moore replied: “We have the needs for this amount firmly in sight, including our own forces and those of the associated powers.”
No Corn Bread, He Gets Divorce
TALLAHASSEE, Fla., Feb. 26 (U. P.)—Northern cooking which gives a southerner indigestion is grounds for divorce, they Florida Supreme. court ruled. The court affirmed the decision of Judge Ross Williams in Dade (Miami) Circuit court that Warren S. Hyman, a native of central Georgia, and his wife, Hermina Hallet Hyman, who was born and reared in Minnesota, “should never have been married as they were ill-suited, inadjustable and incompatible for marriage.” “Northern cooking interfered with his digestion,” Justice Roy Chapman's opinion said, adding that Hyman was raised on cornbread and hot biscuits, and that light bread and crackers were not his accustomed menu. The gastronomic pleasures of southern people were belittled by Mrs. Hyman, according to the’ opinion. The court added that they possessed district and conflicting views and differences on "religion, education, habits, standards, concepts and cultural background.
BIRDS WHO FORGOT AIR DEFENSES, DEAD
CHICAGO (U, P.)—Certain isolationists who [lived lazily on the fat of the land, little dreaming of invasion, are extinct today because they neglected their only means of defense, wi was air power. This parallel was drawn by Bryan Patterson, curator of paleontology at the Field museum,
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