Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 24 January 1945 — Page 10
EE
The Indianapolis Times
- - 80 - desperately needed. $n China.
"The former “vice president is-an-honest; idealistic man
PAGE 10 Wednesday, January 24,1945 :
ROY W. HOWARD WALTER LECKRONE HENRY 'W. MANZ President
Editor Business Manager (A SCRIPPS-HOWARD NEWSPAPER) :
Price in Marion Coun-
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EP RILEY 5551
Give Light and the People Will Find Their Own Way
Member of United Press, Scripps-Howard Newspa~ per Alliance, NEA Serv-
TURN IT DOWN E believe the senate should reject the nomination of Henry A. Wallace to be secretary of commerce.
whose confirmation for the cabinet post the President seeks to give him would, in our opinion, have sad consequences to him and to the country. That opinion is based on three principal considerations:
1. Mr. Wallace is not equipped for the office. As secretary of commerce he would head the world’s most eolossal banking system—the Reconstruction Finance Corp. and other government lending agencies—responsible for billions of taxpayers’ dollars and billions of dollars worth of publicly-financed - industrial plants. And he has had no
banking experience.
2. His nomination is a bald political payoff. Former Secretary Jesse Jones was asked to resign (as the President gaid in a letter which he surely did not expect Mr. Jones to make public) “for this reason only”’—that Mr. Wallace wants to be secretary of commerce and, because of his work for “the success of the ticket,” deserves “almost any service which he believes he can satisfactorily perform.”
8. Mr. Wallace, who says that the job of a secretary of commerce should be “to promote a maximum of national employment by private business,” is heavily and, we believe, impossibly handicapped for doing that job. J » -
THE BRUTAL TRUTH is that private business, large and small, is suspicious and afraid of Mr. Wallace. Mr. Wallace may be a misunderstood man. - The fact remains that business regards him as a leader of that school of thought which would center more and more power in the federal government, and take more and more freedom away from private enterprise. An indispensable qualification for a secretary of commerce, we think, is that he should “have the confidence of business and industry. Mr. Wallace | just doesn’t. > “ If the President had deliberately wanted to scare businessmen out of undertaking the bold planning necessary to provide almost 60 million post-war jobs under a freeenterprise system, he could have done nothing more effective than to make this nomination. The senate can do a great service to the Americans who will need those jobs by refusing to be party to a reckless political deal.
®
OF THE SAME stripe is the nomination of Aubrey Williams as rural electrification administrator. Here is another job requiring technical knowledge and management experience. Aubrey Williams, former head of that monu-
$5 a year; all other states, |
0
REFLECTIONS=—
Famous Line By John W. Hillman
a ne 28 he
TS Nr
INDIANAPOLIS fares very well in , “The Letters of - Alexander Woollcott” (Viking: Press, edited by Beatrice Kaufman and Joseph Hennessey), and one sentence re=curs so drequently that it seems probable that the Town Crier must have heard—probably during one of his ‘numerous visits. with the Tarkingtons—a particularly choice . item of local folklore. ‘ This story stems from the girlhood of some prominent Trdianapolis matrons who shall be nameless here. a A long time ago—just how long we won't mention either—these very young ladies presented a home theatrical for the entertainment of their parents. They wrote the play themselves, . It concerned the trials of a poor but honest young couple. They were about to lose their hone, or something, so the husband—played by one of thé innocents dressed in her brother's clotheseleft for the Yukon
~ a
In the Nick of Time i
SEVEN years later he returned, just in the nick be time, 8 ° Bursting in the door, holding out a paper sack filled with rocks; he declaimed: - “We are saved. I have found gold. Now we can pay the mortgage.” Whereupon the wife replied, “And I have a sure prise for you, teo, darling,” Then sweeping back a blanket from a crib, she revealed seven dolls dressed in baby clothes as she brought down the curtain, and the house, with this famous last line: “I, too, have not been idle.” We don't blame Mr. Woolcott for relishing that line. We like it, too, 2
| Readi ng
the Bu
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HMMM! IE) § WERE You BOSS, 1D GET PREPARED FOR A YANK INVASION OF CHINA
rome soe
And while we are recalling stories; here's one that Carlton K. Matson tells on himself in his Yours Truly column in the Cleveland Press: { “At the time I was ®ditor of the Toledo News-Bee | some years ago,” he writes, “I had a Scotty dog who used to be my regular companion at breakfast. I ate a hearty morning meal in a dining.room cut off from the kitchen by a swing door, which permitted any | louder than average talk to be heard back and forth. | The Scotty dog would sit up and beg while I was disposing of my cereal, and then I would give her the dish to lick.
The Scotty Didn't Approve
“THEN THE hired girl would bring in my bacon and toast and I would get on with eating and reading my paper. One day in the silly season I decided that my dog should not only sit up for food, but that she should bark for it. Thereafter, IT would regularly urge her. to bark, and, failing to get results, would myself | engage in a little barking as an object lesson. It | was quite good barking, as I have long been an amateur barker of some merit, But no results. “The Scotty was obstinate and.had no voice for | barking, anyway. But I persisted, and this went on | until ,I read in Victor Heiser’s book that dogs have | poisons in their mouths which make it inadvisable |
| if not positively dangerous for humans to share |
utensils with dogs unless high-powered sterilization | intervenes before the dishes go on the table again. | I am a sucker for such wamnings, and the next | morning I cut out the feeding, and with it the cus- | tomary lesson in barking to my dog. I sat there | reading. No food. I became irritated. Still no food. I yelled at the maid, “Where's the rest of my | breakfast?” She came a-rushing and said, “I was
than I had ever laughed at myself before, “The maid in the kitchen was waiting for my | bark. All these weeks when I fondly thought I was | teaching my dog to bark for her breakfast, I was to this, except don’t get fooled by the sound of your own barking.”
mental flop,” the national youth administration—the man who counseled relief workers to vote to “keep your friends in power’—is another appointee whose only qualifications are political.
ASIATIC FRONT HEN Premier Koiso reported to the diet that Japan is on the dividing line between survival and death, he stressed the American victories on Luzon and the mounting air attacks on Jap war industries. . ; He doubtless also had in mind certain unmentionables such as the flare up of the old feud between the Jap army and navy over responsibility for defeats, and the possibility that Russian armies now racing toward Berlin may be free to turn on Japan before long. But he is alse troubled ‘by what is happening on the China-Burma mainland, because even there where Jap conquest seemed most secure the allies are gaining. Certainly China is still the weakest allied front, and is apt to remain so for some time. But, compared with only | a few weeks ago, a desperate situation has been converted into one of reasonable hope for us. Though the basic weaknesses of internal division and of poor supply line remain, for the first time something is being done. On the China home front, the generalissimo’s parfial reorganization of the central government, his pledge to modify the dictatorship with democratic processes; and his continued negotiations with tlie rebel Red or agrarian regime of the northwest, have reduced- inefficiency and corruption and increased war co-operation. American experts under the leadership of Gen. Hurley, our ambassador, report progress in economic reorganization.
ALL OF THS has been reflected on the military fronts. | Rapid transfer of Chinese troops from inactive and “political” areas to battle lines; often by American transport planes, and improved morale of troops appear to have
~ stopped the enemy dyive on the capital, The J aps now have
turned to strengthening their grip on the coastal areas and improving their overland Manchuria-Singapore supply route, to meet the threat of American amphibious invasion from the Philippines and perhaps from Formosa, Chief allied mainland gains have been in Burma. With the capture of Wanting, the old Burma road and new Ledo road, and also a pipelifie, will soon be open to the supplies In the southwest British have made a third landing. The long-delayed ne battan action against Singapore may yet develop. : While MacArthur and Nimitz drive across the Pacific other allied forces are preparing the Asiatic prong of the _ pincers. ? ‘i
NICEWOBK.. ~~ = (CONGRESSMAN CARL VINSON wahts to hike the.Presi-
dent's salary by $25,000 because it is now “less than EU
the income of Frank Sinatra. pili J Mr. Roosevelt doesn’t have the best paying ry. But as he h ds into his fourth term,
like good, steady work. | | hive ha ne
WORLD AFFAIRS—
Hemisphere Crisis By William Philip Simms
{ Osear Houston, Elletisville,
state’s and national government's
really barking for my own. I guess there’s no moral +it through,
WASHINGTON, Jan, 24-—Dr. Adolf Berle Jr. former assistant secretary of state, will arrive at Rio de Janeiro’ this ‘week to pre- | sent his credentials to President Getulio Vargas as the new Amer- | ican ambassador to Brazil, Although it is not' yet fully realized in this country, the envoy goes to his new post on the eve of | what informed observers predict | will be one of the most critical | moments in inter-American rela- | tions. The war has introduced many new political, financial ‘and economic factors to hemispheric veia-| tionships.
|
Some of the republics are already asking | what material or moral benefits they derived from | their participation. Others, like Argentina, have be- | come more or less estranged from the rest of the | family. When the war ends—as the European phase of it is expected to do soon—this tendency may become more marked, Brazil is a key country. there will be watched closely by the other American republics. This is especially true because of the strained Yelations between the United States and Argentina which is next door,
Whisper of Possible Clash
MISCHIEF MAKERS are whispering of a possible clash between Brazil and Argentina. The inference, of course, is that the United States might use Brazil to pull its chestnuts out of the Argentina fire. Brazil, the whisperers know, 1s larger, even, than the United States. She has the largest population of any of the Latin Americas and tops them all in natural resources and potential wealth. With the exception of Ecuador and Chile, she shares frontiers with every country south of Panama. Only 1800 miles from Africa, she “guards” the Atlantic “narrows” and commands the approaches to Argentina, Uruguay and other republics in the far south from the direction of. Europe, # Armed and backed by the United. States, Brazil might quickly blossom into a first-class military power. Here in the United States the public has been hearing: a good deal about the good neighbor. policy and how it has created a bond of complete trust and understanding all the way from Alaska to Tierra Del Fuego. Unfortunately that is .not entirely the case.
Part of what we have done has alarmed some of our neighbors.
Whatever we do down
re
Skeptical of Even Best Intentions
MEMBERS OF CONGRESS<and others—have talked of holding on to the Galapagos islands, our military bases in South America, and so on. These have been no riore than the personal views of individuals, But in Latin America they are taken as the official plan of the “Colossus of the North.” - “Generally speaking,” observes Luis Alberto Sane chez, a well-known Peruvian writer, in the January Inter-American, “the United States has no .psychologieal: understanding of Latin America. . . . It does not have to try so desperately and $0 methodically to win our friendship.” ~~ '
and historic roots,” makes thém” skeptical of even our best intentions. Tatin Americans, for example, don’t like so many good will ‘missions and North
2
Wei ik
«He points. out that their distrust “which has logical |
The Hoosier Forum
1 wholly disagree with what you say, but will defend to the death your right to say it.—Voltaire.
“CONSISTENCY, THOU" ART A JEWEL”
(Times readers are invited to express their views in these columns, religious controversies excluded. Because of the volume received, letters should be limited to-250 words.. Letters must be signed. Opinions set forth here are those of the writers, and publication" in no ways implies agreement with those opinions by The Times. The Times assumes no responsi bility for the return of manuscripts and cannot enter correspondence regarding them.)
While the legislature is working on the three-member welfare board, I think now is the time to bring the whole welfare setup into the open and get to the roots of the trouble that is so effectively blogking the efforts to take adequate care of the aged. . As long as the state leaves it up to the counties to dictate the amount of assistance the aged can receive, just that long the aged will not receive the aid they need. The fact that each county is on its own and pays just what it wants to pay means that a county can pay the applicant enough that with the
“ACTION SHOULD BE CLOSELY NOTED” By a Soldier, Camp Atterbury, Soldiers cannot write to -their legislators, public officials, etc. or take any part in politics while in service, but they sure can read and talk among themselves. The current topic among the Indiana soldiers I know concerns our good governor’'s action of turning “thumbs down” on service men (after the election), Personally, I believe he
is being prematurely attacked as his statement referred only to a bonus. The average soldier would not expect a state bonus but we of Indiana would like to see our state follow in line with some of the other states which give a mustering out
help altogether—would~be—the—aver-——————————— = age of about $20 a month. But another ways their expenses on the
adjoining county is paying only 12 taxpayers, salaries were raised right | upon length of service.
pay, which is a nominal sum based |
A A ee by HUN AeA A SA AA 3 on cy ca i 5 wy
oe 4 ro. Amo ba
Major Conflict By Thogas L. Stokes
(Continued From Page One)
have jurisdiction” Soo had Mr, Jones, over all the manifold lends, ing agencies topped off by th Reconstruction Finance. .Corp which have been Jesse Jones’ pe culiar and cherishéd preserve fo so long that it's a habit. =~ The issue is fundamental, and both political and economic in ase
Politically, the shift of posi. tions starts the fight for contro of the Democratic party for the 1948 presidential election. It gives Mr. Wallace and his New Deal and C. I. O. allies—if he is confirmed —a position of advantage to carry on his campaign for the nomination against the conservative wing of the party symbolized in Jesse Jones and his southern and business allies. Economically, the issue goes ‘deep and far beyond the party. , > . - ~—Jesse-Jones—was—the inside. man _ the ch and the contact, in the adininistration, for conse tive business and financial interests. As long as hi was around they felt better about things. Republic ans idolized him, too, as was demonstrated by thi shrieks they are letting out.
amnion
Power Over Purse Strings Involved
BUT THERE is more to it than that, This is a fight over who shall be secretary of commerce, is a fight over who shall control the various lending agencies with which business and industry are se inextricably involved, which were Jesse Jones’ chief! concern, President Roosevelt was advised that Mr. Wallag could be confirmed easily enough merely as secre of commerce, a-harmless and routine post, but w
{ warned against giving him charge also of the lending]
agencies. But this control is what Mr. chiefly, That is the issue, and a serious one, as was indi cated by the prompt introduction by Senator Georg (D. Ga.); finance committee chairman, of a resolution to remove these agencies from supervision by secretary of commerce; that is, from Mr. Wallace. It all Involves power over the purse strings, th sure and certain source of conflict.
Wallace wan
Hands in Business Everywhere
IT CAN BE made clearer, perhaps, by going bac into history. The R. F. C. was created originally b President Hoover as a big lending agency to bolster the then shaky financial structure of the country b, loans to banks, railroads and business, to try to create prosperity from the top, so to speak, Mr. Hoover wanted to avert direct relief measu which Presidént Roosevelt adopted, in addition, when he became president. Mr. Jones was on the R. F. O board originally, : Since then the R. F. C. has extended loans to al sorts of businesses and, with the war, numerous other agencies were created to advance funds for war plants and production. As a consequence, the government has its hand in business all over the country, and it has repres| sentatives on boards of directors of all sorts of enferprises. The hands have been those of Jesse Jones,
or 14 dollars to the aged for the land left about 100 per cent. Now it| The average returning soldier is| conservative banker and businessman, .
same needs. | looks like this raid to double sal-|
We have 92 separate authorities aries will extend to the officials of standards and he needs enough for! He Has
going to be faced with high living |
and boards to administer welfare. both the state and city of Indian-|clothes and for at least one month's
All are independent agencies. NO|apolis.
only a few instances is any of them They propose to get it while the! paying adequate amounts. happen to have a furnace, thelasked for a few dollars more to asbudget for fue] isn't enough to take sist the helpless aged to actually if you cook with oil keep soul and body together, they
If you|getting is good. But when they are| {nor charity. lin the position that will enable {them to start climbing back to]
living expenses. Under present con-
waiting for you to bark” That stopped me for a |two counties are paying the same | In these cases no hesitation is ditions he must grab the first job | moment, and then I burst out laughing more heartily | unless it just happened so, and in shown in respect for the taxpayer.|that comes along and then live on|
bozrowed money until he gets his| first check. They do not ask relief Just put them back]
there is no allowance made for that. exhibit a profound interest in the | where they were when called to
|
If you have a refrigerator, washer, taxpayer that somehow doesn’t ex-|service.
sweeper, iron, and of course, lights, Hist when they are passing the| you are allowed one dollar a month {money out to themselves and the
art several million . dollars from the!
to pay the electric bill, which of other boys. Consistency, thou
course isn’t enough. = la jewel. In order to comply with the budget,- you would have to discard “HERE IS all these comforts that mean so ANOTHER:-BEEF” much to the health and welfare of By Ex-S. Sgt. Blake Tabor, Indianapolis. the aged. And go back to the oil| Here is that “Indianapolis Vet” lamp. The only way you can meet again with another “beef.” This is] this situation is to do without cloth-| my plea—why doesn’t The Times]
ling and use that money to keep start a campaign to familiarize the other officials on these matters {these comforts going as much as people of this city with the honor- |
possible. As for clothing, well you! able discharge button” worn by vetcan’t have it unless some kind erans? Do you realize that 99 per friend donates it. [cent of this city’s population can't In the budget each one is pro- recognize the button for what it vided $14 a month for his food, a!means? fraction less than 47 cents a day.| Isn't it conceivable that we, the] Ask yourself the question, how|vets, resent being mistaken for | would you do it with all foods soi{4-F's? After all we became so in high priced? If the recipient has serving our country. I am now a no electric refrigerator they are out|messenger (motor) for the Western of luck because there is no budget! Union and I meet many people allowance for ice. |daily but few of them know the The county welfare boards can't| meaning of my honorable discharge be ‘blamed for these conditions. button pinned on my lapel above They are_ doing the best they can !the “Western Union badge. Indeed with the limited amount of funds|I've been asked why I'm not in the at their command. They would be!army. I've been informed that glad to properly take care of the|“things are going to be pretty tough aged if the county councils and|on you men when the work-or-fight other tax organizations would per-|bill is passed.” Yes, I've also been mit the appropriations. These con-lasked, “Why aren't you in the arnvy,
Two years (ago- our legislature week for the purpose of familiarizdoubled their pay and increased in|ing “the folks” with our insignia?
Side Glances —By Galbraith
WM. REG. U. 8. PAY, OFF,
“iSometimes | think women are better planners than the ‘men—for
ditions have been given the run-/my boy is.” In all fairness, don’t |around long enough by both parties. you think your paper could spare | | It's time to speak up with the facts, |us a 4x4 space (front page) for a
There is a lot of talk about build-|
ing a new war memorial, aided by|
state. This will probably receive some very heavy lobbying as there would be a nice juicy contract and legal fées involved, which wouldn't be there if the money would be distributed as mustering out rehabilitation funds. The action of the governor and
should be closely noted by the families of servicemen as the servicemen cannot speak for themselves until they become veterans. However, they will certainly be interested in all pertinent news items on this subject wherever they are stationed, » » » “IT'S EASIER TO
SEE BOTH SIDES” By An Ex-Wave, Indianapolis I'm quite sure it's about time we Americans are getting sick and tired | of hearing about 4-Fs. I'm an ex'servicewoman, one of the first from! Indiana when they weren't equipped |
as they are today for the required physical examination for acceptance; therefore I was fortunate enough to receive a few months training, only $0 receive a medical discharge a few months later. Had I been a man, I would have heen classified 4-F immediately instead of 1-C a few months later. Yet I feel just as patriotic on my war job as any member of the armed services. There are thousands of just such cases, yet we pick on the 4-F's. Why not appeal to everyone's patriotic sense of duty and watch thousands of able-bodied women go to work? There is certainly a greater per cent of 4-F's in war plant than women who are able to work, I'm quite sure a greater per cent of them are on the job everyday than the already employed women. It's much easier to see both sides when you've been both places. »
” “106TH REALLY DID A WONDERFUL JOB” By Mrs, N,, Edinburg. Hitler. and his propaganda machine ruined a lot of folks’ Christ-
| mas by the report that the 106th
infantry division was “wiped out.” Since then we've heard it was untrue. The 106th really did a wonderful job and still are, Why can't someone get the facts straight and brag about them? They were stationed at Camp Atterbury the same as others who have received laurels
galore.
‘DAILY THOUGHTS
And he that was dead came forth, bound hand and foot with grave-clothés: and his face was ‘bound about, With a napkin. Jesus saith unto them, Loose him, and let him go~—~John 11:44.
simple sources, and great seas have
American do-gooders down there. They do more A ele 8 J ey
instance, my new secretary hadn't worked: here an hour \
| befor. she tranaged fp ge info a car
| GREAT floods have flown from |
Some Positive Ideas
BUSINESS does not want to have the hand of} Mr. Wallace substituted. This is for two reasons$ First, they do not want him influencing their policies and having a say about what is to be done about war plants; second, they do not want him initiating through his control over these agencies any new spending projects. Henry Wallace has some very positive ideas about what ought to be done about creating jobs through the government's spending policies, with which business does not go along. He is making no bones about his intentions, as he disclosed in the statement he issued when he was appointed. He’ thinks the government ought to play a more direct part on behalf of the people. In his appointe ment the President recognized that, too. The country is about to witness a major conflict
IN WASHINGTON—
Jesse Had a Way By Marshall McNeil :
(Continued From Page One)
authorized —and in practically every instance he has. satisfied the lawmakers. On occasion, such men a8 Rep. Jesse Wolcott (R. Mich) and Senator Robert Taft (R. 0.) have plainly said that they were willing to grant a particular powe er to Mr. Jones—but only because it was Mr. Jones that was going to get it. Over the years, it has been Mr. Jones’ reputation as a cone servative banker, plus his personality, plus his rete ord in handling federal money, that has won for the Recofistruction Finance Corp. almost unlimited powe ers to use government money. Almost always he wrote his own ticket. ; With ease and no apparent trouble, the Houston publisher and capitalist manages what Senator Harry Byrd (D. Va.) has called “the most colossal banking institution the world has ever known, either publie or private.” . These powers have also caused Senator Byrd to say that the R, F. C. and its subsidiary corporas tions operate as a “fourth branch of the government,” virtually immune from control of congress, not even audited by the general accounting office, '
Had Friends Galore in Congress
INDEED, Senator Byrd has remonstrated with Jones for accepting these powers, reminding him tha some day someone else would head the R. F. C. Bus Mr. Jones was satisfied. .
The firing of Mr, Jones by the -President, his ap
pointment of Henry Wallace as successor, and building senate revolt against the lame-duck Vi president's nomination, points up an objective Senator Byrd has long been seeking. i He believes that congress must regain its control over these agencies, that they must be audited by government auditors, and that they must submit budgets, just as do all other federal agencies, for conte’ gress to pass on every year. : ha . Mr. Jones has friends galore in congress. They, like to josh him about all the money which his lending agencies have channeled into Houston, his home town, and into Texas, »
"Uncle Jésse' Seems to Be Through :
BUT THEY'VE never yet caught Jesse making. ‘loans except those he could defend as “good business. As a whole, congress admirés Mr. Jones, and ap=, preciates his services, just as much as the Presiden$, sald he did in his letter firing the Houstonian. The, only difference is that congress wants him to stay, ‘whereas the White House wants him. out. 2 The chances are that whatever happens to he Wallace appointment, or whatever happens to move to divorce the R. F. C. and its lending agencies, from the commerce department, Mr. Jones is through in this administration. eT If that wasn't the President's idea when he wre his letter to Mr. Jones it is generally. believed t! it must be his idea naw since he got, “Uncle Ji ;
acles have by the
ke,
id
WEDNESD OAL AR FOR 25
ins Being Fill ' More Emer Due T
| Those empty cox [lled. [ That's the good éfs had for In | Working dt hig] ble trucking ine dealers this ve carloads of, hich arrived in tl This coal, accor Logers, executive indianapolis Coal lation, is enoug! mergency deman olders. : All Going
| Additional carlos nal are expected of it will g0 in 00 established h els administratic hortage. The pool coal is | dealers who hav d drivers oun the al advisory comm 1s administratic », headed by C irman, in cha liminates time-co on by the indivic Elimination of t on “red tape’ w s first step In ram. ~ End of Sho
“Now that we hs unctioning we'll b th the backlog ers and eventual ge,” Mr. Rogers p ther 48 hours we eliveries followin ours the certifical es by the Red ( An additional rtified yesterday if 300 since the I r investigatior . 1. Longsworth, chairman, anne
g. Mr. Longswort ouseholders to ci ough its specia blished for the c umber is RI ley “Persons seeking sd Cross at its pour regular sw rfere with our es,” Mr. Long 0 orders are nly at the RI le)
JILL FOR | PARK
Opposition to | tate conservation ority to spend | $00,000 in the Ir park fund has be ng in the senate. The fund was c jhe purpose of es bark in Hammond A senate commi 11 to place resp te conservatior purchase of th k yesterday vce easure without Whiting, Ham hicago Chambe ppresentatives aring and urge ort of the bill. The committee he measure to tl broad discussior Paul W, Kerr (R itchell (R. Lal Black (R. Logan: eatures in it.
Le
. BILLS IN Ser
SB 93 (Armstrong on, R. Evansville) uperintendent of | rom $5000-$6500 a | SB 94— (Chubinski mends the taxatior eneral re-assessm ore March 1, 1046 equent re-assessmen er supervision of st lary A)
BB + 95— (Punderbu mends the gross ir e tax on barbers bperators at one-hs ance)
SB 96 (Gonas, D. hildren of decease 'vioemen of worl es withou
8B 97-(8underlan . Indianapolis) A: utions law “to ompanies to make national banks, vings ns.) 8B 983 (Black, R. taxation law provement liens in quent real’ estate.
i 99 (Black, R. 8 1, 2, 3 and Swamp Lands and , 8H 101— (Black. R ssessment lien law pir:
bn 10 per (Swamp Las
H 160 (Heller,
ners.
panies and Morris | under state bankin En A Lgl id for depend ’ Bis monthly pa; MN and $12 increase monthly HE aad Mes) from $4 to $7 a
pro
