Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 16 November 1943 — Page 8

Indicates Woman Was Told ly «| To Get Divorce So She ior, said buy a lo Could Draw More. money(® Judge Mark Rhoads of juvenile Thomas cotirt criticized what he termed the ship

“to house the juventle court, AD Ordinance was om| He told members of the Indianapplan commission and other | tne county school fund, with which/olis alumni chapter of Sigma Delta X to defray a previous appropriation Kappa at a luncheon meeting that building and construction testimony in a juvenile court case Jed him to believe a welfare depart-

welfare department gt “told her a few years ago(ably will become a. royal duchess( Charles H. Bedwell, board. chair-} got a divorce she Would |when she reaches the age of 18 next| man, also reported that reports just be eligible for dependency payments | April and almost immediately will{compiled show the state's assessed

* § serve family relations because social |

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or the children, and the husband, who was of sufficient age, could get old age assistance, was obtained. Judge Rhoads said he was not criticizing the welfare department or any of the department heads because they probably didn’t know of the advice given by the worker. “What makes me mad,” he said, “is this sort of philosophy. It really debauches families.” 5 Miss Helen Guyn, acting welfare director for the past several months, said the policy of the department is to “do whatever we can to pre-

work depends on the unity of the ~The county welfare board, mnder a new '43 law, is now appointed by Judge Rhoads.

DAD DRAFT DEADLOCK MAY BE NEAR BREAK

WASHINGTON, Nov. 18 (U, P). —House-senate cofiferees on the bill to delay drafting of pre-Pearl har= bor fathers met again today amid

‘predictions that their deadlock

might bé broken before nightfall, - Rep. Andrew J. May (D. Ky), chairman of the house conferees, declared his group would: insist on adoption of its version of the bill, and sald he believed agreement could be reached today,

become a member of the regency|valuation now to be $4,382,000,000,f

an increase of 5.16 per cent over

A divorce;

council.

WASHINGTON, Nov. 18 (U. P).

—Arthur Cohn of New York; chair- compliment the tax adjustment

man of the loyalty committee of victims of Naui-Fascist oppression, presented Vice President Henry A. Wallace with a leather-bound volume containing signatures of 16,000 refugees from axis-Europe Who expressed their readiness “to be called upon for service at any time.”

ALGIERS, Nov. 16 (U, P.).— The French national committee of liberation indorsed the Anglo-Soviet-American declaration for an independent Austria after the War,

WASHINGTON, Nov. 16.—A senate judiciary subcommittee approved the nomination of Elmo Pearce Lee Sr. as judge for the fifth circuit court of appeals, despite opposing testimony based on his alleged “unethical conduct” before a.Louisiana

COLUMBUS, O., Nov, 16—A fire which swept through the four-story

National Mattress - Co, plant in

downtown Columbus and had threatenéd to spread to a nearby substation of the Columbus & Southern Ohio Electric Co. was brought under contro] without damage to the power station.

boards throughout the state and particularly the: Marion county board for doing “a fine job” on the

The state board recently complet= ed its annual task of reviewing the budgets of the state's 3000 taxing units, :

Policeman Hurt,

Buf Beer Is Safe

Brewing Co. horses: took the bit

in their teeth again yesterday, |

but an alert policeman prevented them from running amuck. - Patrolman Otis Wiggington was walking his beat at St. Clair and West sts. when the horses started

to Tun sway; The ambitious anie-

mals didn’t get far when Patrolman Wiggington grabbéd the reins. He was treated at the City: hospital for a slight leg injury and returned to his beat. ~ . . A few weeks ago runaway brewing company horses upset the wagon, rolling beer barrels all over the street.

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© When they took the beachhead at Bougainville. the Yanks fought as a team. Planes overhead... - destroyers off-shore . . . invasion barges slipping

* with sharp-shooting leathernecks. :

It’s an old American custom, this business of working together. And it's paying off in victories . .. on battle-front and home-front alike.

For behind the lines, on this side of the seas, anothes battle is going on. i . the battle of transportation . . ; a fight that is growing bigger with every passing day. -

As part of the nation’s great railway system—which

“carries 80 per cent of our fighting forces and nine- -

tenths of the Army's fighting equipment and supplies— we of the New York Central know that this battle is being won . . . by the same American spirit of teamwork that is winning the war over there.

Teamwork between the armed services, the Office of Defense Transportation, the Interstate Commerce Commission, other government agencies, and the railroads Fe 3 : i Teamwork on the part of organized shippers... Teamwork among the individual railroads themselves, working and fighting together in a common cause. This is the kind of shoulder-to-shoulder effort that is winning the battle of n...thatis

enabling the railroads to carry, for 1943, record loads of 725 billion ton-miles of freight and

80 billion lion passenges-miles.

4

And the endless torrent of loaded trains, roRing day and night across the land, thunders an over whelming answer to Axis dictators«<whose “intuition” told them that free men in a democracy