Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 14 June 1944 — Page 11
#Bugene E. Whitehill, 3025 N, Me-| fidian st, vice president of Banner- _ Whitehill, Inc, died of a heart attack yesterday at Lake Wawasee. He was 41. : "A mative of Muncie, Mr. White-
8 has been associated with his f 2 2 0, E Whitehill in the rn t great h business all of his adult life. . A presen ' glder Mr. Whitehill is company § 3 an continent : ! day of final FH hat its great. academy, the {pla . % we fight may "of Finance, University of Pennsyl- . accompanied by a promise of more © ‘ . EL Verna Jean Hanspeter political and economic action = He is survived by his wife, give the class response and . |against Spain to eliminate com- = iv unified married yours ago; h tan rosa. Diplomas will be The Swedish action was the re |
sult of a “businesss deal” between = the U. S. foreign economic admin.
an of anyone member of the Meridian stration and: the SKP 2 menaced for Methodist church. et i company. Diplomatic requests for = Americans 10 local affiliations in a reduction in ballbearing ship= Oriental Masonic lodge, ments had been flatly rejected by ' underground Rite, Shrine, Chamber of Com- : who cares for them as a hobby. Hers |;,.. guedish government. 3 r R. Malinows Swies, Gulbis. ciith, oe spur bond sales. School he pauses in his home-made greenhouse to examine a cactus growth. ademy of Po- Country club Lambs emblem denoting that better than 90 better than iin illuminating He was one of the founders of the| ast September, school NURSING ALONG hood filling station Was Passing | yp, yo 45 jest of & long series of e, Yugoslavia, Young Men of Indianapolis, a one- «3 a thousand odd plants from all out coupons with gas far cacti successful moves to tighten the time luncheon club. p ‘ Combs, “So I sent for them,” Mr. Med- moves to tig eco- 4 “and Belgium, ellesley| parts of the world would make nomic noose around Germany’s neck. \ Europe, pars Funeral services will be held at 3 ARTHUR S FF enwald said. “Now I've got so 1 oe p.m. ot & Bu- | | more than a full time job for most ony cacti I can’t find all of Virtually all of the moves have been EN Dating chanan mortuary : plain dirt gardeners, but to W. C. them when I look.” aimed at ferro-alloys—steel harden= Ti IS DEAD AT AGE 77 (Esa nnd mains BE ERE | hey, and their MRS. CLEO PRITCHETT ; Hanover they're just something td putter proud of a plant called a Donkey's |p 0 T. Crowley. reported 10 fg fore. Poland, > 4 cl Arthur K. Sheffield, 245 W. Overley, oe around with and pass the time of Tail which comes from Mexico, Ps en : Rose velt yesterday that 04, 1830, 1846, Funeral for Mrs. st., died yesterday in his home, Hel {the Indianapolis College of Pharmacy. day. His full time work is that of an orchid cactus from the swamps | coo 8 erro-alloy situation is the tech Wakefield Pritchett, 1449 Earl ave, |. -n ‘| Indians university schoisrstipy will be a 0 repair man. of South America and several | “HOWing signs of deteriomation.” who died yesterday morning In 80} , tomer employee of the U. 8. i| About four years ago, Mr. Med- types of miniature roses whose The Scmpietion of “a temporary toward Indianapolis hospital, will be held |p, ;ner Co, he retired in 1927. Be- enwald, better known out 16th st. blooms are no larger than the | locrorending” with SKF on ballch na- at 10 a. m. tomorrow in the Moore way as “Radio Bill,” t some- th . bearing shipments was announced conspiracy has fore coming to Indianapolis in 1911, y go ickness of an ordinary lead |i. ht 4 & JEwk West Side Community|, wae g plumbing contractor in thing for nothing. His neighbor- pencil lin pri on Calis aa prog mortuary. Anderson. peoples of Doug FEA hig 4 to win a eo Irtvsabe for 30| go rvivors are two sons, Earl A. it, Nine Guilin Mary Hall Cits| CIRCLE OFFICERS TO MEET GOLF TOURNAMENT SET | ois ih triton Special agents, » MIS. member | ,,4 Carroll K., both of Indianapolis, ren oN oa a Tsien ‘Zarsas,| Officers of T, W. Bennett Circle| The Electric League of Indianap-
Zarvas;
FEA said that “for obvious rea-
vis Methodist church ales, ; gf ihe Bes Davis {John Herron Art institute scholarships (23, Ladies of the G. A. R., will meet olis will hold its annual golf tourna-!sons”"—Swedish fear of German re-
e shall have to out the governe
n
yd has done In has set up its which is vastly
slings and Nast raditions of libe
ration will bring at there will be s it is enforced reckon without
as been govern the timidity of reer, more of & pple and for the
again from the’ mbols of nations ents of men and AY: !
on
June 14—~Ree day with a PT and It was a
ydraulic engineer had much to do
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and the Order of the Eastern Star. ips, | a He Motiovia, a. His wife, ea do Serva; Cari A Bricks "ht|at noon tomorrow at Ft. Friendly. | ment and frolic Priday at the High-| prisals—the details could net be reSurvivors include her husband! go. vices will be conducted Jane Blue: BT on: "ilar (Mrs, Irene Compton, president, i! Sd Country club, Frank Argast, vealed, but well informed sources Pred L.: a daughter, Mrs. Harold Rev. M. H. Reynolds at 3 p. Boyd {preside at 1:30 p. m. at a Biss ehalshan of the dinner committee, said that the reduction was “very Wilisey, Indianapolis; three sisters,|, in Fanner & Buchanan announced today. | substantial. Mrs. Jessica Fuller, Indianapolis, mortuary. Burial will be in Ma;
Fannie Lynn, both of Cincinnati; two brothers, Walter H. Wakefield, Jasonville, and Ray T. Wakefield, Pittsburgh, Pa, and four grand¢hildren. : MARVIN LIVELY Rites for Marvin Lively, who
MRS. VIRGINIA CORY
;
PVT. N. T. LINDENBAUM Memorial services for Pvt. Nor-
way, who was Rilled in action at Anzio beachhead last April, were held last night at the Flanner &
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years. A resident of Indianapolis for 17 years and a former Technical high student, services for Mr. Bagwell will be held jn Ironton, O. y Surviving besides his mother, is an uncle, Lester Bagwell, Indianapolis, and his grandmother, Mrs. James Bagwell, of Ironton.
NEW WAVE 4TH OF FAMILY IN SERVICE
member of her family in the service when she left recently for WAVE training at Hunter college, New
Her husband, Cpl. Ray Passwater, has been in the South Pacific
Streber, electrician's mate 3-¢, are
seeing combat duty Italy and the Atlantic. .
FIGHTER’
ORIZONTAL ° (abbr) _.
1 Pictured 83 Greek letter’ |®
heavyweight 56 Mother - | aghter, 57 Play on words ano oi 58 Stable ~ 11 Native metal 59 Swiss * 3 Simplicity ot Roun tain Tear e Was con- Fans ram . 14 Near tender for the 17 Father” ©, 44 Rough lavy; | gifts heavyweight 10 Golf device 48 Scoff 8 British Co- === . 21Maltdrink 49 Presented) lumbia (abbr.) VERTICAL 23 Compete . songs 7Friend 1 Toward 24 Half an em (30 Story 10 Transpose * ' 2 Verbal . 26Breaks -'52 Blackbird of\ (abbr.) 3 Encountered 28 Operatic solos cuckoo Tantalum 412 months 31 54 Dolt (symbol) 8 Gallon (abbr.) 33 Irritate 55 Three ( Evening 8 Doctrine. 36 Pale \form) before 7 Finest 372000 pounds 56 Tangle Measure of 8 Sphere 38 Boy < 87 Parcel Post i area 9 Pleasant 39 Before (abbr.) oS pats point 10 Spain (abbr.) 40 Accomplish > 60 Pair no —r sn 20 Within Fer r Ed
LICR IE TI LIATYIONIINIGE FINE S HAIPE.ISERAIR a! TION Niele BI 1 1
REAPS
2h ie 3
As an incentive for
purchase, the title of bond king and queen was ready for the boy and girl student of school 3 making the most sales. Crowned this morning were Lorma Kellams, §-A, and David Hopping, 2-B.
By WENBDELL L. WILLKIE (Distributed by the United Press) A free economy, by its nature, entails a certain amount of fluctuation and risk. As a matter of fact, much of its strength and its very freedoms are directly related to its risks. But one cannot enjoy the freedoms of such a so-
without the bare necessities of life. This function of the social insurances, ’
Security Laws Inadequate
We have too often been led to regard the social insurances as the opposite rather than the supplement of our enterprise system. We have been presented with them as alternatives. Do you want security or initiative? Deo you want or adventure? This is a factitious issue, We need both. Indeed we cannot have one without the other. We cannot have security in terms of an advancing standard of living without enterprise. We cannot have the initiative and energy we need for an expanding economy without preserving and increasing the vigor of our human resources. Our present social security laws are inadequate for this purpose. The proposed Wagner-Murray-Dingell bill contains some of the essentials of an inclusive social security program. But unfortunately it is in many respects poorly conceived and perpetuates the inequities of the present law. Taxes still fall most heavily upon the lowest paid workers, while benefits are largest to the most highly paid. Coverage is still incomplete and eligibility rules are complicated. Need knows no rules of eligibil-
for funds for research and medical education, Another form of insurance that {s of outstanding importance for the relatively stable functioning of our free economy is an adequate and uniform system of federal unemployment insurance, Today, we have fifty-one separate laws governing unemployment compensation. Our economy is too interdependent to allow this division of responsibility to continue. The present tax collection machinery, federal for some insurances, state for others, with duplication of records, is wasteful, costly and time-consuming. And benefit rates vary widely and are inadequate. The post-war reconversion strain will fall unevenly on the states. In this crucial period we shall need the stabilizing influence of uniform standards and procedures, and of adequate benefits fixed, not acording to former wages, but on the basis of a regional cost of living, to cover rare necessities.
Historie Decision Made
For a long time our society left the education of children to the individual parent’s ability to pay. which
We are now faced with another decision as logical and as necessary, about which we must begin to think. We have left the feeding clothing, shelter and medical care of our children to be determined by their parents’ income alone. It hasn't worked and can never work for a man
wage may have five or six children to ‘rear on that wage. No wage or income based upon the value of the economic contribution of the individual can ever be made t6 take into proper. consideration the needs of his
Social Security Laws Are Inadequate, Willkie Says in Urging Reforms by GOP
The children of America are the future of America. The principles of self-preservation, no less than those of humanity, de-
We should begin the moment, the war is over to see that every child in America grows up with the basic necessities of education, good food, adequate clothing, medical care and a decent home, Urges All ‘Start Fair’ We whose faith is in a freely competitive society have the special obligation of seeing that all “start fair” physically and mentally, as well equipped for the race as their natural endowment permits, There is nothing new in providing men with minimum protection. When our society was predominantly agricultural, Abraham Lincoln's homestead laws offered to the people of the United States what was then necessary protection—land and a chance to build a home. Today when our society is predominantly industrial, the formulas must change. And all the resolutions for the preservation of the enterprise system will not do one fraction as much to preserve it as the assurance to men and
protections which are basic to their time. The Republican party should see to it that they get them.
Tomorrow—"Ecanomy of Demobilization.”
by the Indianapolis parks
olis News newshoys’
oi 2s never} loo late 10 WAVE wen
FOR HER DAD
play.
———————————————— BAND CONCERT SERIES OPENS A program of 50 outdoor band concerts planned for the summer
department will begin at 8 o'clock tonight in Christian park. The Indianapband, with Hazel Dell Shirley, soloist, and Marcella Rosebrock, accordionist, - will
c
Starched Lace
ELTAGELS
7.95
This intriguing name means that
the weave of these sun-and-shadow lace hats blend straw and fabric to create a fascinating of : fect, There are cartwheels and modest brinis, each perfect for June days and nights, Black, : brown, pecan tan, yellow; natural, - 4
navy and white.
8 o
