Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 25 March 1943 — Page 5

Ls ails Republicans “TACME-EVANS NAMED FOUR LOCAL WOMEN “For 1c OS ty' 82 d Assem bly] IN ANTITRUST CASE, TO TRAIN. AS WAACS

: Democratic State Chairman Fred 10 hours 'S over the ain Sixteen flour mill corporations, 11 of Oey ane Aye T. Buradak, 5S : PF, Bays today declared that the re- 6) x their and the Millers Na- «s Josephir Thousands Escape, Attack |cent G. 0. P.-controlied legislative| “And in striking contrast to the en on were indioted by 4 LLINOIS St; Margaret B. Niccum, 921 4 session gave “conclusive proof of the Republican pledge that but few| Temple ave., and Betty I. Shearer, Germans and Terrorize |inability of the Republican party to bills would Be introduced . >. there federal grand jury yesterday on|33ss Roosevelt ave. Gertrude W. : : govern the state.” His assertion was|was an avalanche of trivial bills in-|charges of violating the Sherman|McAllen, 1909 S. High School rd. 4 Whole Towns. contained in altroduced which had no bearing on|anti-trust law. - {wil report at Ft. Oglethorpe Up-to-date, he has reappointed four Democratic attorneys and booklet dealing|the welfare of the state #5 a whole, indictments, presented to has named only four new Republican deputies. And two of the Re- | WASHINGTON, March 25 (U. publican appointments filled vacancies. The four Democrats who |P.)—Spreading revolts among the - have been reappointed are James 6,000,000 war prisoners and con-

. The but which did occupy 90 per cent t Judge John P. B of the yaluable time of this Wwar- u.s Dito Juqes John P. Bares: time legislature. omas Clar) cceed i repared at Dem-| “The Republicans, after con 2b o Sheedy Thug P. Wason in. the public welfare | odds-and-ends dre cleaned. Up, |scripted foreign laborers now in Pp t : man Arnold as head of the antjdepartment and David I. Day, | the governor says. Ger are. creating a serious Byron B. Emswiller and Fred C. Mr. Northam and ooine N. |" 3 : : McClurg, all of Indianapolis, in | Beamer, former attorney general, [Problem for the Nazis on the home

ocratic state head- demning bitterly bureaucracy and il hee and issions, Created more to waste| trust division of the justice depart is being sent to [and squander the people’s money ment. indictment cnarged that de- : mocratic legis-|than ever was created before by any * the gross income tax department. | served as legal advisers to the |front, it was revealed in high dip- Demo and party legislature. Pleading for Amerie spile yariatime In casts ot Produg The Republicans appointed are | governor fusing the session of |lomatic quarters today. : : on the defendants met periodically Conner D. Ross, Greenwood, state | the legislature, . Beamer quit- Hatred of their Nazi captors and ; out the state. hav? provided that right.” E highway department; Elmer Q. | ting when he became chairman [hunger have driven the escaped Mr. Bays “If the people of | Mr. Bays described the Republican brid Ld a Pe - Lockyear, Evansville, public wel- | of the public service commission |foreigners to desperate measures|Indiana needed further evidence of [leadership as “weak.” " ages in which the flour is sold.”

TT i

BY EARL RICHERT

ATTORNEY GENERAL JAMES Emmert has been going slow in making appointments under the new law which gives him the ‘power to appoint all attorneys employed by the state.

T i

workers through- (they killed the bill which Would | 1d “agreed upon a uniform sched.

on March 1.

fare department; Donald H. Hun-'

ter, state health department, and John J, McShane, Indianapolis, gross income tax department. _ Mr. Ross replaced Caleb Lind‘Sey and Mr. Lockyear took the post held by George L. Diven. - Mr, Hunter and Mr. McShane filled vacancies.

Salaries of six of the deputies

have approved by the state board of finance as recommended by Mr. Emmert. They are: Mr. Wason, $333 a month; Mr. Day, $325; Mr, Emswiller, $325: Mr. McClurg, $385; Mr. Ross, $355 and Mr, Hunter, $275. No salary recommendations have yet been received by the finance board for Mr. McShane and Mr. Lockyear. The new law provides that the salaries of the deputies appointed by Mr. Emmert shall be approved by the Republican - controlled finance board. The minimum provided by the law is $3000 annually and the maximum, $5000. The Republican attorney géneral says that while the Democratic reappointments are temporary the men will be replaced gradually.

No Legal Adviser

‘GOVERNOR SCHRICKER does not intend to emulate the practices of many governors in other states of having a full-time legal adviser. James K. Northam, former chief deputy attorney general who is now acting as legal adviser to the governor, will end his duties along that line within

They were paid from party funds. ” 8 8 ODDS AND ENDS: Samuel C. Hadden, who receives $5200 annually as chairman of the state highway commission, has turned down an offer of the $16,000-a-year job as executive secretary of the state highway officials’ ‘association in Washington where’ it costs a small fortune to live . . . . Miss Margaret Fulp, formerly one of the key secretaries at state G. O. P. headquarters, is now working in the state police department. Reports are that her departure from state headquarters came as a result of politics. She is a close friend of Frank T. Millis. G. O. P. house floor leader in the ’41 session, who is now vacationing at Hot Springs, Ark., with Lieut. Gov. Charles Dawson —the man regarded by the Gates’ crowd as their present No. 1 opponent.

SCHOOLS BORROW $600,000 TIL JUNE

The school board has borrowed $600,000 from six Indianapolis banks to pay operating expenses until the spring installments of taxes are collected and distributed. The loan was made on a bid of three-fourths of 1 per cent offered jointly by the six major downtown banks. The loan will be repaid in June when the county auditor

makes the semi-annual distribution

not only to sustain themselves but to attack German home mcrale. . Thousands of the prisoners and workers have escaped and prey on German citizens, and in some cases terrorize whole towns.

» Clamor During Raids’

Information leaking out of Germany shows that the problem is especially acute during allied bombings of industrial cities when the escaped prisoners emerge from their hiding places and add to the general confusion. The regular police have been unable to control the situation. Citizens have attempted to protect themselves by organizing civilian guards to patrol secluded highways and to come to the rescue of waylaid countrymen. The French are reported to "be taking the leadership inh organizing the escaped prisoners into bands capable of doing greater damage than could be accomplished by indiivdual efforts. There are approximately 1,700,000 French prisoners of war in Germany, held there since the fall of France in 1940. Of some 6,000,000 foreigners held in ‘Germany against their will there are, in addition to the French, about 30,000 or 40,000 Danes, a large number of Poles and Italians, an un-

known number of Russians and

some’ Belgians,

PLANS TROOP VISIT LONDON, March 25 (U. P.)— Archbishop Francis J. Spellman of New York plans to visit American troops in India and China before returning to the United States, it

of collections.

was learned today.

the inability of the Republican party to govern the state, they have but to carefully scrutinize the legislative record as it was written in the 83d general assembly,” Mr. Bays said in a foreword to the booklet.

Charges Costly Assembly

“The Republican session just closed was the most costly to the taxpayers in the history of the state of Indiana—even exceeding the former all-time expensive record of the notorious Republican controlled 82d general assembly. “The Republican leaders, disregarding their, guarantee to .the people of this state that this session would be in the interest of the taxpayers and that it would freeze the healthy balance in the state treasury for the post-war program, have been so extravagant that the Republican press has termed the session the ‘salary grab and fee grab session of 1943.” °

Attacks ‘Long’ Session

Mr. Bays also referred sarcastically to the short session and fewbill statements made by Republican leaders at the opening of the session.

“In the face of the Republican

promise of a short session, the legislature was one of the longest on record,” he said. (The session ran

The Democratic .state chairman praised the Democratic governor and his minority members. of the legislature. “One refreshing note in the wearisome 61 days was the inspiring, clear cut, helpful message by Governor Schricker,” he said. “This message, one of the ablest ever delivered to an Indiana legislature, clearly proves the uherring leadership of our splendid governor.” Of the Democratic legislators, Mr. Bays said that they were loyal and true to the interests of good government. i

NAZIS RETALIATE FOR RAIDS ON CONTINENT

LONDON, March 25 (U. P.).—Adverse weather was believed today to have forced an overnight lull in allied raids on the continent While German planes struck back in retaliatory attacks. Rescyg workers dug for additional victims of the bombing attack that wrecked a dozen buildings in a southeast England town. At least

12 'were killed. The buildings included a schoolhouse. A communique announced that at least

| four enemy planes were destroyed.

Among the companies named was the Acme-Evans Co. of apolis and William N. Bowman, vice president. Company officials, when informed of the indictment, said they had known nothing about it. “It’s purely a federation affair,” one said. “We never have been asked one way or .another about it.” He pointed out that Mr, Bowman has been a member of the federation’s package differential committee only since last July and that apparently the grand jury had indicted members of the committee.

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