Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 17 January 1945 — Page 10
ven NN SORIA WR i thy
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AN ING
WELFARE VIEWS T0 BE STUDIED
| Legislative | Criticism of Plan for x Reorganization. »
Criticism of the proposed
| mittee ‘probably at a meeting to{morrow afternoon. .
At that time the committee, in{cluding Rep. Earl Teckemeyer (R. | Indianapolis), author of the various welfare reorganization bills, will | weigh opinions offered by a score lof persons at a public meeting yes|terday. While approving objectives of the investigation, the great majority of those appearing at the hearing vigorously - opposed Rep. Teckemeyer’s plans to: LONE: Abolish the present five‘man spate! welfare board which serves in an advisory capacity, and replace it with a three-member administrative board. TWO: Reshuffle appointments to county welfare boards by delegating appointments to county . councils,
county commissioners and trustees
Group Hears
‘state land county welfare shakeup will be ‘sifted by the house welfare com-|§
Made a heroine of the Soviét = union for her exploits during the Red army's forcing of the Dnieper river, Sénior Sergeant of the Guards Vera Koshcheyeva (above) displays her collection of medals . won in combat.
in addition to circuit judges. At present circuit judge (in Marion BOBBY SOX FETE {county the juvenile judge) have full| ‘county ' welfare board appointive | RULERS CHOSEN
| power, ‘Jodie McWhorter to Reign!
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| THREE: Open welfare records to {inspection by public officials, 1 | Leading Foes Listed | Some 300 persons crowded into [the house chamber for the hearing. . ars {Among those opposing the more With Phillip Jolly Over {drastic recommendations were: : . Mrs. John K. Goodwin, president Winter Carnival. of the Indiana League of Women | Voters; Robert F. Be of the “Queen” Jodie McWhorter and | Family Welfare Society; Mrs. Sarah | “King” Phillip Jolly will preside Jan. {9 a - o es ate Eo |Evans, Lake county, State Council | 3 30 over the city’s first annual win 3hey San Dy ) lof Municipal Workers; Judge | ter festival to be held at the ColiMentholatum! Jars, tubes 304’ 'Emsley W. Johnson of Marion Sum: Superior court 3; Maurice Pettit,| Their selection was made last 1 ENTH 0 LATU | {South Bend, president of the In-|night by representatives from each diana State association of welfare(of the city’s "Teen Canteen com-=-ox mmm. | Workers and Walter Frisbie, state munity swing high {C. I. O. secretary. school youths, Although both 16 and students at Tech high school, the “royal” cou-
centers: for
Those Favoring Change
i Persons charging that alleged ple met for the first time at the | welfare. abuses demanded state election. > and county board shakeups and | Represents Brookside generally - indorsing the recom-| :
| Josie, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. | president of the «Clinton county Frank McWhorter, 1236 N. Oakland
| board; B. J. Brown, representing | 'ave., is-five feet “two inches tall {welfare recipients; Roger Benja- | weighs. 105 pounds and has a set of /min of the Indianapolis Taxpayers’ | dimples topped by a head of jet- | association and William H. Chris- | black hair: tie of Evansville, representing the| Jodie” represented the Brookside Security Tax Research bureau. | Community center. : Many other organizations, civic | Phillip, six feet tall, is the son of and professional, placed themselves{Mr. and Mrs. Samuel J. Jolly, 2016 {on record as supporting or opp0s- | N- Gent ave. |ing the tentative legislation. The “king” and “queen” will preRemonstrants contended that! | side over the elaborate program of creation of the three-mémber ad. | music ice events and other enter- | ministrative board would split wel- | tainment planned by the city recre- | fare responsibility ifi the state and | ation department for the bobby Sox | that division of “appointive. powers | 8angs. {in the county setup would throw | K. Mark Cowen, recreation direc- | welfare indchinery into political | tor, is in charge of the festival | sauaibles. They though welfare Se ——————————
rons Sis’ BLUFFTON LEADER GETS SAFETY POST
RITES FOR MALONEY SCHEDULED FRIDAY Lewis. B. Smith, of Bluffton, Republican chairman in Wells county MERIDEN, Conn., Jan. 17 (U. P,).|for 12 years, has been named head —Congressional associates and Cop- fof the state safety financial renecticut officials and-political lead- sponsibility division by Austin R. ers will attend the funeral Friday Killian, state police superintendent. of Democratic U. S. Senator Francis: He. succeeds James C. Dunn, of T Maloney, who died yesterday. Marion, Mr. Smith, as head of the Brien McMahon, Norwalk, who division, also will be a deputy dibecame Connecticut's senior senator rector of public safety under Superthrough Maloney's death, will head intendent Killian. the senate delegation. The financial responsibilty diThe house delegation will include vision was created by the 1942 Connecticut's six representatives| legislature, providing revocation of and Rep. A. 8S. Monroney (Okla.), motorists’ licenses if vice chairman of the joint congres- have insurance. or are not financialsional organization study committee, ly able to pay for damages in traffic lof which Maloney was § chairman. {accidents.
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|DECATUR BOUNDARY | AIRED IN SENATE
A bill restoring to Decatur township its former boundary line and permitting.the township to receive taxes. from valuable property now located in Perry township was discussed at a public hearing in the senate today. Senator Hoyt Moore (R. Indianapolis) is author of the measure
which seeks to return to Decatur
township $10,000,000 in taxable property of the Indianapolis Power
and Light Co.
to catur
A 1943 .actvrestored the property township, but the
Indiana supreme court voided the bill on a legal technicality. Without
the property,
Decatur township
went broke.
Township schools. last -year were
closed when township funds were exhausted, However, the state board
of education
reopened them. A
total of $83,000 in state funds was spent in the township in 1944.
THE INDIANAPOLIS { TIMES
By FREDERICK C. OTHMAN United Press Staff Correspondent
WASHINGTON, Jan 17. =-3layor Fiorello LaGuardia now can doft his horn-rimmed spectacles (re3-] vealing a not-so-far-away ‘look in his peepers) and see a New York city where each housewife wears a ribbon in her khair and whistles while she works in an apartment with a window.in every room. “And sun shines in every window,” hizzoner added as he looked, for the benefit of Senator Robert
A, Taft and Co. toward that happy day. It was snowing outside, but
Mayor ‘LaGuardia saw: sunshine, only. That was obvious. 8 uw 8 THE ONE trouble, said the Little Flower, is that the rest of the country also has got to build apartments with windows and sunshine,
“Or I'm sunk,” the mayor said.
we x . a
“I"can't absorb any more people in New York City,” Bs LU
LaGuardia was wearing a double-breasted coat as tight as a $78 room-and-a-half domicile on 52d street. He unbuttoned it, sank gratefully into a senatorial easy chair, and told the post-war
economit and planning committee’
that: ONE. He already has 69,398 people living in more than 16,000 apartments complete with sunshine, two per cent financing, and a federal grant. TWO: Fourteen more projects costing $120,286,000 are on the drawing boards and ready to go when the war ends.
roo.» ONLY THING worrying the mayor are. those babies in the
building trades, acting like buggy whip manufacturers trying to buck the horseless carriage.
DOWNSTAIRS at
He's their pal and he wants that understood, but when the buijldings with the sunshine-start go+ ing up, he doesn’t want them to
‘gum the works with strikes,
“Like when .we were building one of those apartment centers and a quarrel developed between the sheet metal workers and the carpenters over who should put in the baseboards,” he said. “That held us up for weeks and: weeks and added enormously to the costs.” - # 8 =» THE MAYOR said when you're building for people who pay only $20 a month for a four room apartment, you've got to watch your outgo and as of now he's a little concerned over cement floors. They're something neat, new and economical for apartment houses, If an apartment has a cement floor, the flat beneath it auto-
re : WEDNESDAY, JAN. 17, 1048 Little Flower Visions Post-War Arcadia for Housewives
WASSON'S
‘matically gets a first Telass ceiling, and so on, down to the basement, ‘The mayor said the- plasterers weren't going to like that. i Such matters can be worked ous. 2 =» ” I THE IMPORTANT thing, he said, is to move the sleazy-looking wife from her cold water flat and watch her blossom out in & neat house dress and a ribbon in her hair ' when she moves into ‘® modern home. Senator Taft asked him whether the committee eould visit the new apartments, i “You betcha,” sard the mayor) “Only don't give us any advance notice. Don't let the housing authority know. I don't like dress parades.” He said drop in any old time, give him a buzz, and he'd take the come mittee to call on the ladies with the hair ribbons,
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WE HATEI we heard the tournament . M what it was al ham, president
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Lost—A S
THE HEIG] the Indianapol man stepped asked Miss M teeth around h while attendin Risk informed where else as t James H. Flyn in Ayres’ Satu ments. About
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