Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 10 July 1946 — Page 2
Bare Kentuckians Charge Of Being ‘Investigated’ © Last September. (Continued From Page one) .
e ever
Dr. Henry: Garsson the Illinois munitions will testify In the profits probe foday.
gure Will T
pr
n
"THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
estify At Senate
2. '
4 ur RAT at
Sonia WEDNESDAY, JULY 10, 1046,
ar Profits Hearing |
ASK HUSBAND'S AID IN MYSTERY DEATH
BURBANK, Cal, July 10 (U, P). —Police today awaited thie arrival of Thomas Jaspe}, who they hoped could help clear up mystery surrounding the death of his attractive blond wife, a *31-year-old model whose body was found in his apartment surrounded by notes and empty whisky bottles, Jasper was at Big Bear lake, a mountain resort, when _the body of his estranged wife, Darlene Taylor, was found yesterday in his apartment, Police tentatively ruled the death
«+. head of
a suicide, but said they still needed empire. He some questions answered. They senate war
telegraphed Jasper a request to
wg bois him to “just
's' calls began ent decided Erie's funds to
protect the government during contract rene Mr,
Bi ii
renegotiation, Royall said the third and came last Sept. 15 when id him he had informawithholding figure WAS
GERE EEE.
cessive. Announcement that Fields was coming to “testify was made by Committee Chairman James M. Mead (D. N. ¥) who said he had received a telegram from Fields.
Deny Racial Charges
of - telegrams from three top executives of the combine. The three denounced charges of “anti-semi-tism” made against the committee ~~ by & publicist who said he was hired by their attorney, Wayne Johnson. The publicist, Henry M. Paynter, made the charges in’ testimony yes- |
:
The three executives are Dr. Henry M. Garsson, Allen B. Gell man and Joseph T. Weiss of the Erie Basin au and Batavia Co. parent the “paper -empire” which rma in more. than $78,000,000 in The three have been summoned for questioning today. Agent for “King” Mr. Mitchell said Fields introduced himself as a representative of Egypt's King Farouk and offered
i
tribution” to get the inquiry halted. issue of “anti-Semitism” was injected into the inquiry yesterday by Mr. Paynter, 47-year-old Washsubpenaed after he
He sald he had ' there was an anti-Se-
you (Paynter) repre the decent Jews of Amer-
Defends Rep. May a
Mr. Paynter sald a ‘great’ {h-
hearing the Garssons testify In and
Standing on “my cenception of professional ethics,” the publicist refused to disclose whether he had written the speech Mr, May made to the house ‘Monday, decrying a “conspiracy of false. hood and malice.” 2 “Did you go to Congressman May's room at the Roosevelt hotel on Friday?” Senator Homer E, Ferguson (R. Mich), asked. “I will freeze: in hell before 1 will betray a confidence,” said Mr. Paynter,
HOOSIERS PAY MORE LUXURY ITEM TAYES
Hoosiers paid more federal taxes on luxury items during the fiscal year ehding Juhe 30, but this was!
tion and excess profits. Wa resulted in a total revenue
{© Pevehue, reported today.
were: Distilled spirits (up more!
Shaolin, electrical energy; tele-|
ons, estates and gifts, | Milos Aid parts and transportation | Categories which showed less |
POrRtibA and excess profits, frie estimated incomes, with- | h and employment reverie,
|
the Holder, « A An-
a, Hitbld, Mary bre, Nancy Engle.
Mary Dalton: My.
k, wish I MT J. Besste AnVirginia Btewart, and
snd Omer, Dotébn, and
«Wallon, 535 © Lawrence, 2354
James O. Basilan
" amendment Elmer broaden Justice” had been done to Mr. May | Wherry’s Then he accused the sénators of | livestock, poultry and all their raw product derivatives. have removed controls -from hides, leather, pharmaceuticals and other similar by-products. _ TWO: Received an amendnient from Senator Albert W. Hawkes (R. | N. J), to force OPA to raise residential rents 15 per cent in al] de-| fense rental areas. THREE: Receifd an amendment from Senator Clyde M. Reed (R. Kas), to exempt grain and grain products from price control also proposed restrictions be removed on futures trading done between expiration of the old price June 30 and a date 30 days after a new price law is enacted.
overbalanced by a decline in taxes| Snowland
tollected oh salaries a _| Ferguson (R. Mich.) which would ADE COrpoTA | deprive OPA of rent jurisdiction in
{cities or states that have 00,080.108.03, or $28,010,100 59 | CNS | since June 30. Th than the year-ago total rl Despite the threat of O'Daniel’s (8 Shirley Wilcox, collector of internal | THuster and introduction of the
= SENATE CHOPS OPA MEASURE
Takes Up Plan to Lift] iq missing -pefsons - report Ted
_ Dairy Product
(Continued From Page One)
the possibility of another Presidential veto. Exempt Meat and Eggs
Late yesterday the
Mr. Mead also announced receipt|to exempt meat, poultry and eggs from any new price controls. The senate accepted, cottonseed and soybean decontrol amendment offered by Senator d (D. Miss), as a substitute for a similar measure he introduced yesterday. Senator Robert A. Taft (R. O.). | told the.sapate that yesterday's vote | on livestock included lard from hogs and therefore justified decontrol of lard substitutes. Mr. Barkley commented "that “at the rate we're going, should be amended. to decontrol grapes since livestock eat grapes.”
OPA Foes Rejoice
OPA foes rejoiced
the senate brushed aside President Truman's wishes, and piled up a 40-to0-28 vote in favor of the meat, poultry and eggs exceptions yesterthe senator a $5000 campaign “con-| 4
ay. (Indiana's Senator
Wills voted for she ameifimath) +
The vote set
ing more and more ington publicist, bili sent a series of telegrams to Wash- the bill ington newspapers. While many Southerners ( desire to’ Mr. Paynter iabeled the commit- continue OPA in somé form, they! tee the “Mead gestapo” and ac-|pever will agree fo setting up the cused it of “suppressing the facts.”| pEPC. They victoriously filibusterad “legitimate reason | against the measute tor six weeks last winter.
What ‘Happened Yesighlag | . day's. topsy-turvy,
ty Mr. Truman
Du debath
- ONE: Rejected, 51 to 25, red by Senator (D.
‘Thomas, Senator plan by
FOUR: Heard Sena
{Taft (R. O) urge continuance of (rent controls regardless of the outcome of the OPA extension fight. This support increased thet probability rent controls wi
FIVE: Received
sponsored by Senators William F.
(R. Cal)
Ww amendments, Mr.
1 ‘thems whith eost Indiana people | Ite thought action in the bill ceuld mote In taxes during the period | be completed by Thursday. Mr. Barkley confidently predictthan $70,000,000), fermented liquor, €d the senate would table the FEPC He added he did not believe and long distance phone | Senator O'Daniel could muster any iris Jewelty, furs, cosmetics, dies! help for another Alibuster,
| rider,
MULE HITCH oN ARUCKS
WABHINGTON —T
Portion than a year ago were: Gor- | automotive trucks sold to the sony indl- | in 1899, said to be the first mot the governme
vehicle sale to
were so equipped ‘tha
| telephone tolls andl tax on | be hitched to it should it refuse
[to run.’
IN INDIANAPOLIS
Reeves: Marcus, Alice
cocele. septicemia 13 whit egenihardt, 83 ware, poronaty peelust
- | kg, pe agbet Lh Longelin, 4, at [ity oll aA 438 N ser, id at "sas E Michigan:
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Passage would
Charles, Louise Hinton: ‘William, Mary MullénRoly: Robert, Blue Grant, .and Ertiest, Helth Ren . AL Hame-Russell, Glenna 8habks, 939 N 1bbs; Hugo, Murial Welch, 2003 Hdfre:" Jesh, Margaret Parson, 1109 leasant: . Paul, Ura Harmbh, 3557 Garden, and Paul; Jula Hackelman, 1605 Draper. DEATHS Emma June Snyder, 3, At Riley, Henit-
fits, i Bal al Y425 Rovssvelt, |
return and assist the investigation. One of the notes found beside the body was addressed to Jasper. “Dear Tom,” it read, “I've never written a letter like this, Perhaps I should have. I came in this morning about 9:00, thinking you'd be here . ..” The rest of the «note was ‘Allegible: 2 The model was identified “by an
| last year by Jasper and canceled a few days later.
Limits.
senate voted
42 to 34, the
the measure
at the way
Raymond E.
: souls
i” x Rupr ‘MM an Okla), to
Kenneth 8. decontrolling
He
tor- Robert A
11. be restored. amendments
and Homer
set rent
Barkley said
hree delivery
t a mule eould
Lippard, twins
Af 1338 N. Delaoh
Dénny
ity, GArcihdoma enodis cerebral
at 738 N.. De.
, myocarditis, Lhe cuciiont | al’ 6880 Nokth | ao vin | 36 N. Lineie, |
(Continued From Page One)
fering {from pneumonia. Her abdomen was swollen and her ~heart was in difficulty, physicians reported. The child was placed in an oxygen tent and the heavy feeding of vitamins was undertaken. However, the little girl grew steadily worse and died July 1. The 27-year-old mother of the child acknowledged she “wasn't much on vitamins. Knows What te Cook
“I know what to coqk, but there's not much now & person can cook,” she declared ruefully. She emphasized that she and her family are “on a budget and I have to run my house on it.” The father owns 8 small truck with which he contracts hauling jobs. There are three other children in the family. Two of the children are girls, eight ahd five, while the youngest is a 10-month-old boy. Physicians at the hospital said they were informed the child had been fed a diet of goat's milk and potatoes, with occasional servings of beans.’ This was denied bxsthe young mother, who said that produce from
a - -
City Hospital Doctors Blame Beri-Beri for Death of Girl, 4
a garden also was fed to the child, “Anyone with any sense knows I wouldn't feed a child only beans
and potatoes,” she glared.
An Age-Old Issue
Stumps Senator
WASHINGTON, July 10 (U.P). ~The age-old question — which came first, the hen or the egg?— has the senate baffled, too. Senator Elmer Thomas (D. Okla.) yesterday offered an amendment to the compromise | OPA bill which would decontrol livestock and livestock products and poultry products, “including eges.” Senate Democratic Leader Al ben W. Barkley (Ky.) demanded to know: «“Are eggs the product of poultry or is poultry -the Product of
eggs?” « Senator Thomas admitted . “he didn't know--hé just wanted to make sure’ eggs were. included in
the amendment,
COLLEGES READY T0 HANDLE LOAD
No Qualified Hoosier Faces Denial 8% Education.
With fall enrollments estimated at 53,000 students, Indiana college and university heads believe no qualified Hoosler desirous of a higher. education will be turned away. More than 14,000 out-of-state [applicants have been denied ad- | mission, however, because the state institutions are giving preference |to Indiana residents, At a called meeting of the In. |dians Conference of Higher Educa{tion in the Columbia club yesterday, college officials were told by Dr, | Frank Sparks, president of Wabash college and conference leader, that ‘half of the total fall enrollment {will be veterans. This year's enrollment, highest in history, will exceed by 8000 the capacity set in May by conference {members when they initiated action to enlarge educational facilities, | Among ‘plans put in effect to handle overflow of college students are ‘expansion: of housing facilities, |an increase in the number of -class [periods per day, co-ordination of
admissions and’ requests for early application for admission, Surveys presented at yesterday's meeting showed Indiana ° high schools graduated 32,110 students this year. Of this number 6046 plan to enter state colleges and 1543 intend to attend universities in othew states. Also 482 non-veteran graduates of previous years are expected to enroll in September, A report given by the Veterans’ revealed 20,738 of 58,000 veterans surveyed will seek
schools. Applications for on-the-job training will. reach 19065 by October.
FREE REPAIR WORK SET FOR AMPUTEES
Hoosler amputee veterans today were advised to obtain service cards which entitles thém to immedia free artificial mb repair The veterans administration it had mailed instructions to 300 amputees in Ipdiana for obtaining the prosthetic service cards. Other amputee veterans who have recently moved into Indiana were urged to contact the nearest VA
* |office for information.
The special card will enable veterans to get immediate repair service nat to exceed $35 without first obtaining a prior authority from the VA. ’
These dainty, flower sprigged frocks for
Big 'n’ Little Sister
ATOM PLANE CREW RACING THE STORK
FAIRFIELD, Cal, July 10 (U, P), ~~The pilot and flight engineer of the atom test superfortress “Dave's Dream” continued their aerial race with the stork today, Br The B-20 arrived” at Fairfield Suisun army air base yesterday from Honolulu. It was scheduled to take off early today for Roswell, N. M. At the controls will be MaJ, Woodrow P. Swancutt, Wisconsin Rapids, Wis, and Lt. Robert M. Glenn, Anderson, 8. C,, will be flight
r. Both Maj. Swancutt's wife and the wife of Lt. Glenn are expecting babies momentarily. The two filers are expecting leaves upon their arrival in New Mexico and will proe ceed on their flight home. Also aboard the plane will be -|eight additional crew members and
HEADS K. OF C. COUNCIL : Times Special NOTRE DAME, Ind, July 10 William H. McShay, son of Mr. and Mrs, Hubert W, McShay, 43 N, Wallace “st. Indjanapolis, was elected treasurer of the a I ty of Notre Danie council 147], Knights of Columbus, at the recent
election of officers’ of the council,
+ + « fashioned of
wonderful, washable Bates cotton, 4.00
Sizes 1103,3106,7 1014
Toddlers’, Children's, Girls’ Shops, Fourth Ploer
Summer store hours: Daily, 9:45.5:15—Saturday, 9i45.1:00
Ayres’ Tea Room and will be open on
Downstairs Lunch Room Saturdays frem
7.00 11:00 A, M. to 12:48 P, M,
POS FAC
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By Time: LISBON Antonio | solemn, a out to be his 15th chieftain,
Mr, 1
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