Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 12 March 1946 — Page 11
CH 12, 1948 rl 1 6, Traged
rched Tor the bodie 1d Mrs. Brasher’ ted on a bridge! ‘eek bank, was th s. A woman's foot the water, \ppeared that Mrs e of a federal gov employee, had be , because of illnes vith her husband her, Bloomington 1e children’ retired Then, Tyler said parently took th amily. car to thd hem off thé spa arself.
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505, 0. E. 8, will eles ming year at p. at 1220 Lynhurst ar] hy matron. Lyle War on.
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| No. 148, degree of e host to a pitch-in 6:30 p. m. at 20th and nac tribe of Redme be guests, —
ints League will mee row in the Dearborn will preside.
MOSCOW TRIP rch 12 (U. p.). Ghavam. reported to Moscow at t session of th ent today.
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“Am I'on? Am I on?”.
| oyille Central 8 to 5 and Ft. Wayne Central 10 to 7.
Inside Indianapo
A CITY PARK department employee who prefers
players for the gamblers last Saturday at the state basketball tourney semi-finals in the Butler fieldhouse. . . . She says the bettors obstructed her view by prancing around, waving their arms and shouting « “We undergo the same thing all summer at Victory field,” she said with a
stifled yawn. , . . Incidentally state tourney finals odds on potential winners as posted by the lads along betting row are Flora 4 to 1; Anderson 2 to 1; Evans-
. + » Several rumors, none of them authentic, have been getting around more than a henpecked husband on his night out. . . . These baseless reports assert: Russia has declared war on the U, S.; the U. 8. has declared war on Russia; all veterans discharged within the past eight months are being recalled to arms; -all furloughs have been cancelled and all reserve troops mobilized. . , , Switchboards of newspaper city rooms, servicemen's centers and police headquarters have been bum, with queries and denials. .
. Pi Bela Phi Coeds Charleen Harrison, Marion Stewart and Phyllis Augustin.
Kite-flyers on the Butler campus . .
Russian Fears
SHANGHAI, China, March 12.—Russia - fears America, and it is this fear psychology that is driving Russia to seek two things in Manchuria: FIRST: Remqval of Manchuria as a threat to the Soviet's Siberian flank. SECOND: Domination of Manchurian economy, At least, such is the impression I gained on a three-week junket into Manchuria, from which*I have just returned. The tragedy of the situation is that America, too, fears Russia. If the fears and suspicions of these two powers are allowed to grow, it is not impossible that: we can drift into another war which neither nation wants, The Russians have violated China's sovereignty, which they pledged to respect in Manchuria. They have stripped factories of machinery and sent it to Russia. They have demanded industrial partnership with the Chinese, which in practice seems meant to result in Soviet domination. Soviet Russia indeed appears to be pursuing the same imperialistic. aims in Manchuria to- the detriment of China as were pursued by the Russia of Czar Nicholas II. This represents a most ‘cynical treatment of the _Sino-Soviet treaty, signed in Moscow only last Aug. 14, and of the assurance given Generalissimo Chiang Kai-shek by Foreign Commissar Viacheslav M. Molotov at the war's end.
Between Two Powers
CHINA is in the unfortunate position of being caught between the only two remaining great powers left in the world today. On the surface, the conflict is between China and Russia. But actually the Manchuria issue is part of
the broad and critical conflict of interests between -
the United States and Russia, which is ranging across the orient. China, obviously, will need outside help in taking over and operating the huge industrial setup in Manchuria. And equally obvious this help must come from either the U. 8. or Russia.
Science
THE MORE science studies the earth's atmosphere, the more amazing it becomes that the surface tem- - perature of the earth should be for the most part in that range between the freezing point and the boiling point of water which enables life to survive. The war brought home by direct experience to many of our young men that even when the temperature on the ground was that of an intensely hot summer day, the temperature a few miles above the earth’s surface was far below zero. Temperatures in the stratosphere are frequently at 40 or 50 degrees below zero and a height of -10 miles above the earth's surface the temperature is about 70 degrees below zero, fahrenheit. It continues to fall during the next five miles and reaches what apparently is a maximum low for'this part of the atmosphere at about an’ altitude of 15 miles above sea level with a temperature of 75 degrees below zero. But now a strange and surprising thing begins to happen. The atmosphere begins to get warmer and by the time a height of 25 miles is reached the temperature has climbed back to zero.
.\ - Mercury Rises, Then Falls BUT EVEN greater surprises are in store. By the time an altitude of 40 miles is reached the temperature has climbed to almost the boiling point of water, having reached a figure of 200 degrees fahrenheit. But this state of affairs does not continue for long. Once again the temperature drops, returning to zero at about 50 miles and in the next few miles dropping to about 150 degrees below. Then it rises again to zero at about 60 miles. The most mysterious part of this whole picture is the zone of high temperature, around an altitude of 40 miles, where the temperature becomes practically that of boiling water, |
My Day
NEW YORK (Monday).+I think one of the most important things for us tb be concerned about at the present time is the emérgency housing legislation ybefore congress. There seems to be little realization In congress that the people of the country are really aroused ahout housing. I was, therefore, much interested in seeing the results of a public-opinion poll made under the supervision of one of our national magazines. According to this poll, 81.3 per cent of thé people want rent ceilings. maintained; 63.3 per cent want ceiling. prices kept on building materials; 75.6 per cent want these materials channeled into the low-cost residential fleld by government action; 48.1 per cent want the government to embark on: a large-scale home-building program; 80 per cent want government loans to individuals for low and medium priced houses. .
Skyrocketing of Pric ‘es
THE NORTH Atlantic states and the Far West, according to this survey, are the regions where housing is most difficult to find. Therefore, more people in those areas seem to realize that, if the ceilings on rents and building materials were to be removed, there would be a skyrocketing of. prices for Jving quarters, © We' again would have ‘building going on which - could ‘not Justity ‘the amount of money py into At
recently was showered on his office staff by Frank Gruesbeck, assistant in the state motor vehicles bureau: . . gals who can’t get out and stand in department store |- lines. . . calls to suggest that nylons be rationed via a Book 4 stamp. ,, . the biggest was tackled by State Auditor A. V. Burch, now busily engaged in directing a thorough rubdown of the statehouse.... . eventually to make the statehouse, dome the most conspicuous landmark in town, barring the monument, by gilding it with gold leaf. a tarnished bronze. gold leaf an unidentified stone face leering over the east statehouse "entrance and a stone eagle with a nine-foot wingspread over the south entrance. Columns in the statehouse’s immense first floor hall have been scrubbed three times and are about to undergo another washing because dirt streaks are still noticeable. . . carpenters found termites in only one section—the
“The Usher and the Aces’
‘cago theater in 1929. ,", , Walt insists he’s been bat-
"needs of the veterans.
lis Fly Kites
APPRECIATION in the form of 60 pairs of nyiohs
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The Indianapolis
. He explained the recipients are all working
SECOND SECTION
TUESDAY, MARCH 12, 1946 ™
. “I had a friend sooo" , . . One reader
. Of all the state’s spring cleaning jobs, Among other things, he hopes
. ++ It's now coated with .'Mr, Burch likewise expects to
. In remodeling the ancient capitol
floor of the secretary of state's office.
AFTER collecting rejection slips for 15 years, State C. I. O. Secretary Walter Frisbie yesterday sold a ‘short story to Esquire, ... He was elated and bewildered simultaneously because he thought he'd sent the manuscript to Blue Book , . . entitled “The Usher and the Aces,” the tale is a fictionalized account of Walt’s experiences as an employee of an East Chi-
ting out short stories “for relaxation” during the wee small hours when he's victimized by nervous insomnia. , . , Zaniest contest.of a zany season is to be held on Fairview campus tomorrow with Butler coeds competing to see who can fly the highest kite. . The girls’ kite contest is sponsored by pledges of Sigma Nu fraternity, ,.. Unless farmers hereabouts plant more clover, Hoosier bees are threat- | ened with “imminent starvation,” warns James Star- | key, the state conservation department's apiarist. | . . Mr. Starkey laments the fact that farmers, hyp- | notized by high prices, are sowing cash crops and neg- | lecting the fertilizing legumes. . , , Already, the race | for pollen and nectar has begun in southern Indiana | among budding maples and elms. ,.. Apropos of nothing at all there are 40.000 beekeepers in Indiana. | . » . Mrs," Etta Drotz of 2121 Ringgold ave. reports an early “orchid and white” crocus .pushing its way through her front yard.
By William McGaffin
From the Russia aviewpoint, apparently, it would be as dangerous to allow the U. 8. to penetrate to the Siberian border as it was to have the menacing Jap spearhead there 14 years ago. The achievement of a dominant position in one of the world’s richest concentrations of resources is vital to the Soviets in their desperate efforts to recoup strength drained from them by the devastating German invasion. The Russians’ program in respect to the stripped Manchurian factories remains the question mark. There is no question but that they would like to get this vast and important concentration of factories going again, That is, if they can exercise the dominate role in-their operation.
Aim to Dominate
SOME OBSERVERS opine that the Russians would be willing to return some of the machinery they removed if the Chinese would give in to their demands. Others feel that the Russians hope the Chinese will be able to get new machinery from the! U.S. In any case, with Manchurian machinery now in| its possession Russia is in a good strategical position whatever happens. The fact that Russia was to eager
PARKING METERS? = YES, CITY WILL: INSTALL THEM
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MEMORANDUM: Parking Meters. : City Editor.
In relaience to your parking meter assignment of March 4, were you kidding? This subject is more compli-
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to grab what Ed Pauley termed “a lot of second-hand | cated than who is paying for the courthouse and why.
machinery” serves as a reminder of the attrition it suffered during the war. If Russia gets its way Chinese sovereignty dn Manchuria will get only hominal recognition and China will be a very junior partner. It does not appear that the Soviets intend to anpex Manchuria or-to occupy it permanently with troops, except at Port Arthur under their treaty right to militarize this important naval base. All indications are, however, that if and when the majority of their troops are withdrawn they plan to| leave behind a civilian “army” of technicians arid
The answer to question number one: Is the city going |, to buy parking meters, is “Yes.” The answer to question number two:
| ‘and install them despite vig-
|orous protest from citizens, is :
still “Yes.” |
‘that the most implacable foe lof the parking meter will be-|
busi o : ; usinessmen, who will assure Russia of a dominant come its staunchest supporter |
position in Manchurian economy.
Copyright. 1946, by The Indianapolis Times and The Chicago Daily News, Inc.
By David Dietz,
when he comes to know and able survey, is “Yes.”
love this little instument. When will meters be installed? «| Brother, I don't know. Neither
hall, In a general way we know that the chief source s = = of heag of the earth's atmosphere is the radiation of EMBER, "Kin the s The earth .itself gives off a little heat of its REM paring
own but this is minor by comparison. As the sun's radiation comes down through the| atmosphere it is absorbed by the molecules of air. The difference in the composition and density of the air at various levels must play an important part: in the creationzof temperature bands.
Density Changes Rapidly
radiated back in the form of long infrared or heat rays. The density of the air ghanges with amazing! rapidity depending on the altitude. Half of the earth’s atmosphere is contained in the first 3% miles above sea level. This fact, plus the radiation of long| heat rays from the earth's surface explains why the| surface temperature remains livable while the at-|
. mosphere is so cold.
One’ fourth of the earth’s atmosphere or half of the portion above 3% miles is contained between| that level and an altitude of eight miles. Thereafter, the atmosphere thins out at an ever-increasing rate| until at an altitude of 60 miles ‘the density of He/ air is only a millionth of ‘what it is at sea level. In other words, the density is beginning to ap-| proach what we consider a pretty good vacuum in an} ordinary thermos bottle.
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At a height of 80 miles the density of the at-|
mosphere is down to what is considered a very good vacuum in a scientific laboratory experiment. But there are still enough molecules of air to cause large meteors to heat to incandescence and to form trails.
By Eleanor Roosevelt
In the present period, when shelter is so difficult to | find, people will. of course, throw all considerations | of cost to the winds. But, later on, they might not
be able to pay the interest ‘on the morey borrowed}
for building and therefore might lose everything they had put into it.
Not Well Organized
THE PUBLIC attitude seems to be sound in wanting ceilings kept on rents and on building ‘materials, but the public does not seem to be well enough organized to be able to impress on the members of congress its desires for low-and medium priced housing. I think the young veterans’ organizations have been fairly vocal, but even they do riot seem to have made a real campaign on individual congressmen. I think the original housing bill, which was greatly altered in the house, should be restored in the senate, and a real effort should be made to meet the
»
all of our citizens, A shortage of housing for veterans creates a shortage of housing for all citizens and, in the big cities, this overcrowding is becoming a menace to health. Also. overcrowding disrupts family life and often leads ‘to low moral standards. We should have foreseen many of the needs which now face us.. Having failed in preparatiofi, “however,
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low-cost housing quickly! ,
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This bill woyld indirectly help |
we can at least do the right thing now and provide
have been a subject around the city hall for six years.
It will do this on the theory | it nickels.
oes anybody else around the city (je parking meter haven't got
Will the city buy
If you don't keep paying it off, t gives you the flag. But you can park ferever—if you keep feeding
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DOES the parking meter help solve traffic problems? The answer, based on an avail-
I'm referring to a survey made last year by the Indiana Municipal league. So far as I can learn, the officials concerned with studying
O/I1SY Vara
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more money for the city. He bases
his conclusion, he says, on a sur-{then 35 pages long. vey made several years ago of 364|and the works board awarded the
cities by Vehicular Parking Ltd. of Newark, N. J. What Vehicular Parking Ltd is, Mr. Hereth doesn’t know, he says. So maybe somebody ought to tip off that this organization was formed originally by the automatic meter companies as a patent poal. s ® =» MR. HERETH cites the experience of Toledo, O., which he says gets $86 annual revenue on each of its 1200 meters. These are automatic, he says. On the basis of comparative populations, Indianapolis should have 2000 meters if Toledo has about 1200, since Indianapolis is 38 per cent larger, according to Mr. Hereth. That estimate doesn't take into account the relative traffc loads in the downtown areas of both towns.
around to this survey yet—deéspite | the fact they can pick up a copy |
meters on the fourth floor of the city hall. |
Six Indiana cities which. have been using meters for several years |
After listening to parking meter report that:
salesmen describe the little wonder all this time, most city officials] | figure they could build: one from memory out of old coat Hangers] and a piggy bank.
It isn't the mechanism of the steady profit thereafter. IT IS ALSO. necessary to remember that a large parking meter which is so compli- | Meters which at first were oppart of the sun's radiation comes down through the| cated. It’s the financial and politi- | posed by a majority were liked by a atmosphere and strikes the ground from which it is|ca] circus that develops every time | majority—after motorists got used
the city sets out to buy some. ” ” » ise that all the standing parking meters do about the same job, more |or less. They clock the interval in { which your car is parked in front of them. When« the interval is up, they show a signal, so that all the traffic cop has to do is write out the ticket. A parking meter is no respecter of persons nor the age and general | debilitation of a .vehicle. It is a little, mechanical policeman all by | itself.
> HANNAH <
|
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| | |
LET'S START out on the — Evansville, Lafayette, Marion
Meters have helped them move] | traffic through congested areas. Meters have cost them nothing, since they pay for themselves in lless than a year and then yield a
| to them. These cities were Anderson, El:
and New Albany. » » . AMONG OTHERS who haven't seen this municipal league survey is City Purchasing Agent Edward G. Hereth, who says he has made his own study on the parking meter situation. | There are two types of parking meters the city can buy: The manual type, where the parker winds the ‘clock by turning ‘a lever after inserting a cein; and the automatic, where the parker simply inserts
Mr. Hereth’s observations on parking meters are worth noting, since his recommendation may well be lone of the deciding factors in the Iselection of a parking meter. There doesn't appear to be any | scientific reason why an automatic meter should yield more revenue than a mahual meter. NN. IS ANY particular make of meter favored? It seems certain at the hall that the Park-O-Meter has the inside track. This is manufactured by the
Mac-Nick Co. and Magee Hale Park-O-Meter Co. of Oklahoma City.
Its most recent bid listed a price of $57 plus $2.50 for a coin register, making a total bid of $59.50. The concern proposes to install the meters on a six-months trial basis, then sell them on a contract, giving 25 per cent of collections to the city until the meter is paid’ for. This is not the lowest bid, but one of the lowest. I don't know whether it is° any befter or any worse than anybody else's meter, but persons who are in a position to influence the award of the contract seem to like it. - » ”
the coin. This latter has to be rewound periodically by a municipal employe. The real competition in the pgrk-| ing meter field seems to be between the makers of the manual and auto- | matic. types. Each can point out a dozen faults in the other's product. . 8
meter is out of the running, as far as the city purchasing agent and
The Y. M. C. A. and Y. W.-C. A. chapters at Butler university . will sponsor an all-school dance and
mixer beginning at 9 p. m. Friday lin the fieldhouse. Miss Rebecca Taggart, Indianapolis, and Russell Miller, Harrisburg, Pa., have been appointed co-chair-men of thé*affair which is designed 'to acquaint Butler's new veterans with other students and the facuity.
Other committees are William chairman,
Hardman, Indianapolis, land Miss Molly 'O'Dell,»Springfield,
‘111; Miss Patricia Bond, Miss Pa~
| THIS, you will recall, was the me{ter which the city decided to pur- | chase last fall in its second attempt to buy porking meters. Back in October the safety board {originally awarded a contract to the |Kar-Park Corp. of Cincinnati O. (City Attorney Henry Krug then
[ruled that the safety board didn't JUST BETWEEN us, it appears| |have the authority to award the|impetus, the works board is exat the momerft that the manual|contract. That authority was vested pected to begin contract negotia-
in the works board.
Well the works board went along
séveral other officials are concerned. |with the award but city council Mr. Hereth says that he prefers|{threw out the contract on the| the automatic type because it makes grounds of “legal complications.”
All-School Dance and Mixer To Welcome Bi
utler's Veferans
tricia Wilkins, Miss Joy Mudd and George Mueller, all of Indianaplolis; Daniel Rhodes, Ft. Wayne; Leroy Compton, Acton, and _Robert Sanders and Miss Julianna Hamp, Kokomo, decorations; Miss Barbara Wells and William Ramsdell,
rett and Miss Marjorie Lanahan
ner, Owensville, publicity,
If and when the city buys parking meters, here are the spots where it will cost you a nickel to park your automobile. In some ' places you'll be permitted to park two hours, in other places an hour and in the downtown district five cents will buy only 24 or 36 minutes of time.
Ib
management conference,
American system of ‘free enter- | prise.
role less pleasing to industrialists, Now he is beginning the periodical battle for betterment of the wage contract of the United Workers.
might overturn the economic applecart of the officials who have been
John L. Lewis Directs Miners’ Wage Demands
By FRED W. PERKINS WASHINGTON, March 12.--8ix months ago John L. Lewis, as a
ember of the national labor.
number of industrial leaders with description of the virtues of the Today Mr. Lewis appears in a Mine
And before he gets through he
uilding a shaky structure of post
war industrial peace.
. . THE OPENING acts are in a nig
ballroom of the Shoreham hotel. It is a little more hohe bom. x ; gold-painted chairs. There is an rsle down the middle.
On one side are seated less than
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a hundred spokesnieny and others from the management side of bituminous coal mining. On the other” side are more than 200 men from the coal fields—sent here as members of their union's “policy committee,” The policy committee is supposed to have formulated the demands which Mr, Lewis presents today, Actually these men--most of them, despite their store clothes, plainly showing their daily familiarity with hard and honest manual labor— merely ratified what “Big John" and his closest advisers have been working on for weeks, » . »
THE MEN from the coal fields didn’t know until shortly before to day’s meeting the exact meanings of the demands they would present, Mr. Lewis kept them in close conferences yesterday in mine worker
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NEW specifications were drawn Bids came in
contract to Park-O-Meter, Kar-Park threatened to sue the city if the contract was accepted. The company contended the 35-page specifications were so drawn as to make it impossible for any other meter to meet them. So the council threw out the contract a second time. I have a copy of a memorandum dated Jan, 28, 1946, commenting on the involutions of the parking meter specifications and the contract. It was sent to council's finance committee by a person in the city hall with the initials “E. G. H.” It says: “In view of the lengthy contract submitted to your committee by the legal department, I believe you gentlemen will be interested in the inclosed letter and the short, concise, understandable contract that could be made with any parking meter company.” The word “any” was underscored with a heavy blue inkstroke, apparently by the pers who initialed the memo.
YOU. REMEMBER that after council vecided the contract with Park-O-Meter, the works board was instructed to re-adyertise for bids. This it did. Specifications were boiled down from 35 pages to three ines. All they specified was a coin operated machine and this time they were so general, you could submit a pinball machine. x = » THE SIX bids which were received are now being studied. Last week, sample meters from each of the bidders were examined for about three hours by the council. Most of the salesmen agreed that
headquarters, and again this morning in a meeting. :
Apparently. the idea was to’ pres vent a leakage of the néws with which Mr. Lewis wanted to surprise the coal operators. A gathering like this—the operators on one side, the miners on the
/| other—is what they call a “town
hall meeting.” Everybody there, even such of the public as would like to witness the proceedings. Mr. Lewis presents his platform with heavy oratory. ” . » : LATER, in this case probably to. morrow, Charles O'Neill, of central Pennsylvania and New York Oity, will reply for the operators. He is the long-time spokesman for the northern management group. Mr. O'Neill started out as a miner and once was a district official of the United Mnie Workers. Former Sen ator Edward R. Burke may speak for southern operators. After the open sessions the cone ferees will go behind closed ‘doors, and they will have to come out with an agreement or an extension of contract before April 1 or there will be a coal strike, This is a national wage confer ence—the second in recent years. It represents all the 28 states in which coal is produced, from states bordering ‘the Atlantic to those on the Pacific.
DOMINANT states are Pennsyle vania, West Virginia, Ohio, Kens = tucky and Tennessee of the soe called Appalachian field. Alabama, Indiana and Illinois also are ime portant. : Importance of the industry is even greater than its geographical spread. Without bituminous coal much of the manufacturing and transportation of the nation would grind to an unwilling stop. Mr, Lewis has shown time and again that he is not averse to letting his men go out on strike, The question whether that will happen this year is involved with the extent of the 1946 demands, their reception by the operators, and how the probable impasse is dealt with by the concerned gove ernment agencies. x
We, the Wome
Indianapolis, co-chairmen, and Miss Ruth Ellen Pohler, Miss Carol Jar-
Indianapolis, and Miss Jane Sum- |coricerning the Scott Chrlstfe, Indianapolis, will |\vious meter contract to the
havé charge of securing chaperons |O-Meter firm last January. Meters | and Robert Wells, ndianupolis, will | from six firms were demonstrated to|a
actual cost of assembling a meter is only $18.50, but prices quoted of | from $50 to $78 represent cost of | administration, sales, organization, | promotion and whatnot. Well, this 1s the third time in a year that the city has become “hot” on parking nieters. So that’s all I know about the subject. IT hope you are just as confused as I am —Dick Lewis
Sending Wives Abroad Is Blow To Army Griping
By RUTH MILLETT - IF AND WHEN men serving oversea have their wives sent to them—and it looks now as though it won't be long—Uncle Sam ought to get a little rest from the come plaints of dissatisfied servicemen, And not just because of the wives’
CITY TO BUY METER CHOSEN BY MAYOR sous seeence. einer. ox
Under Mayor Robert H. Tyndall's| gripe about what is wrong with the army when he becomes head of a household. : Chances are he has forgotten the thousand-and-one annoyances and small problems of family life. If he solves those or just sits around and fumes about them, he won't “have, much time for worrys ing about what is wrong with the army.
{tions tomorrow with the Park-O-Meter Co. of Oklahoma City, Okla., for the installation of 2000 meters in downtown Indianapolis. At a closed session yesterday in the mayor's office, the mayor's “choice” was determined as the “pest buy” by the city executive works board members, City Engineer Thomas R. Jacobt and City Purchasing Agent Edward G. Hereth. The least expensive of the three automatic-type meters on which bids were recefved, the Park-O-Meter sells for $57 each. The Kar-|the news that “back home” Park. meter at $66.73 and the Dual | arent so good, either. meter at $64.50 were the other au-! and ‘then, anyway, why should Wilatie- ype oles. i bother toy blame his troubles on | On the grounds of logal “com com- | Uncle Sam once he has his wie, ,| plications” and lack of ‘knowledge handy to take the rap. : various meters, so much easier ‘to say, councilmen refused to ratify a you?” than Why " doesn's the k~ YY oor Fo
» - . THERE WON'T be so many of those “bull-sessions” — where dis« satisfaction breeds—for Tol im, Snes He'll be having dinner
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