Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 24 August 1944 — Page 8

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PARAMOUNT EARNERS

PHILADELPHIA, Aug. 24 (U, P).

) |—Actor Fred MacMurray received

($422, 166 from Paramount Pictures, {Inc., New York, Jast year, the com | pany 's annual report to the securi- | [tes and exchange commission reivealed yesterday. Paramount also paid Harry L. (Bing) Crosby $311,111 and producer George de Sylva, $263,946. | Under a bonus or profit-sharing 'plan Cecil B. DeMille Productions, Inc.. received $365,435 from Para- | maunt. William H. Pine, Corp., re- | ceived $191.520 under the same plan. Paramount paid Ross Federal $487,579 in fees for

tributors.”

E onive

By SHERLEY UHL

The Chamber of Commerce attack | against current city health and san{itation functions was vigorously renewed last night by Robert Keiser, the chamber’s research director, who assailed the health department as “the only orre of its size in the nation where nobody knows quite what goes on.” His verbal assault came during city council's review of the health board's record $225,822 budget including a $1500 boost in the salary of, Dr. Herman G. Morgan, health board secretary. - Mr. Keiser upheld the upper-bracket wage increase, “not because of the personalities in-

| ‘investigating ticket sales of dis-

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volved, but because we've got to raise salaries to attract a new and good administration.” “Well, Dr. Morgan should be able {to buy a couple of bags of peanuts with that raise,” wrily commented | Councilman Ross Manly. Mr. Keiser told councilmen that {health board records are ‘“nonlexistent,” that he department as | it now stands “is the most ex- | pensive in the United States in | comparison with services rendered.” Heeding his advice that good sal- | aries should remain in the health { budget as bait for improved professional personnel, council left the personal services item untouched, but bluepenciled approximately $45,000 from the city isolation hos- | pital expense sheet, described by Councilman Manly as “the most | flagrant exampi® of budget padding

in municipal history:

! On the assumption that chickenfed venereal patients are overcatered to, the city fathers slashed 1$10,000 off the $46,000 food fund, land ordered $20,000 snipped off (total isolation hospital wages.

Speculate on Shake-Up

Commenting on the possibility of a health department shakse-up, Councilman Marily said he agreed that present health and sanitation services werg “inefficient,” but deplored the fact that “the mayor never seems willing to fire any-

IRL IT [AK

body.” Assured .by Chief Job Sur-

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and Inefficient

veyor Fred Telford that “a dozen persons have been dismissed for in=efficiency,” Mr, ‘Manly declared, “That's news to me.” Council also scratched a $30,000 malaria control appropriation from anticipated health board expenditures because no detailed mosquito-| riddance program is available. They promised to grant the money when and if a complete state-city-county control campaign is mapped. In all about three cents was knocked off the proposed $1.535 levy as council went to work with its budget paring knife for the first time. Virtually all cuts were made on materials and equipment items, with salaries going unscathed. Plans to assign civilians “with batons” to school patrol details, thus releasing 60 patrolmen for more strenuous tasks was revealed last night by Councilman Herman E. Bowers after a dead-line conference with Police Chief Clifford Becker.

|

Deputize Civilians Civilians detailed to the school patrol posts will be deputized to make regular traffic arrests, but will be identified by white belts and caps only. In an unexpectedly generous gesIture, council voted $164,000 for a, thoroughfare improvement program which Plan Director Noble Hollister | said will be launched this year i priorities are available. Among projects listed as “urgent” enough for wartime construction. were. Widening of Delaware. .st.| from 16th st. to Fall creek and of Washington blvd. from Fall creek| to 34th st.; widening of 38th st. from Keystone ave. to two and a| half miles east through acquisition of former Indiana railroad right-| of-way; elimination of traffic “traps” at the junctions of Central ave East st. and Ft. Wayne ave, and lat Southeastern ave. Rural st. and English ave.; construction of grade elevations at Shelby st, East st. Madison ave., Kentucky ave. and Morris st. and replacement of the old Massachusetts ave.-10th st.

separation.

It takes only account here

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