Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 7 August 1946 — Page 19
G. 7, 1946
‘Says
nalism survives
pan, 1 will tend
nent of the war
int alone cannot titudes to social
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punishment of racts attention ittack the ‘basic
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WEDNESDAY, AUG. 7,
Hen we Frere,
OH, THESE HORRID
PIMPLES!
pose ugly faeial blemishes; PiliDles, blotches may be dermalophylosis — the medical name for certain external skin irritations caused by the higher fungi. Such infections are often very stubborn and annoying. A common-sense way to combat them is with a fungicidal prepara~ tion such as TING. ¢ TING is both fungicidal and antiseptic. It is a dainty, pleasant-to-use, non-gre aay cream that kills certain types of fungi on contact! It may be just what you need to help clear up the skin condition that is bothering you. Even if other products have failed, get TING Antiseptic Medicated Cream today. Only 50 cents at your druggist.
~
1046
EIEN we
Enjoyed by Any
By EARL
class of citizens,
comparable benefits, Civil service employees whose benefits fall short
of those now in effect for railroad
employees are expected to seek parity. The new law even provides for maternity benefits for women employees. They are to be paid for 57 days before childbirth and 58 days afterward. The rate will depend upon the
gl
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HMB [1 UAL TY ARES) i] Sieie ANGER SIL. AIPTRIEIS IN BIOTA dS PARES 0 3 [CIOL] [FIAIN] TTHERE THiS! =k LIOERD IN NINERIRIO) CEBED (S)o)l=. SLC] [| Il] [LIYE] MIA RS ERR EVIE PR ai > (het LOIS] EE (AX os Es % ALTE] NOTA TEE
2% Abstract being 35 Dispatched 25 Fruit - 39 Jump 26 Fuss ¢, 40 Gasp 29 Beverage 41 Amounts (ab.) 30 Devotion ._ _ 42 Seasoning 31 Single things 43 Chase away 33Rants __ 44 Great Lake 34 Female sheep 49 Butterfly (pl) 50 Not (prefix)
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RAILWAY ACT SEEN ASLABOR PATTERN
‘{ Newly Revised Law Gives
yw.age who have children under
Greatest Financial Security| Working Group.
RICHERT
: cripps-Howard Staff Writer WASHINGTON, Aug, 7.—Regarded here as a sign of things to come
is the new-revised railroad retirement act which gives to the nation’s 1,500,000 railroad workers the greatest financial security enjoyed by any
Both business and labor leaders expect the revised law, signed last week by President Truman, to spur other organized groups to fight for
woman's salary during the preceding calendar year. A woman earning between $1600 and $2000 would be paid $4 a day. Under the complicated formula set up, it would also be possible for a woman to work for a railroad only one month, draw $150 6r more and then collect maternity benefits nearly two years later at a rate of $1.75 a day. Sick Benefits
The, gsame situation applies to sick beitefits. The maximum that can be drawn for sickness is $25
ing over $2500 a year would be paid at the rate of $5 a day for a fiveday week. Any employee who is ill, regard- { less of cause, is eligible for sick | benefits. | Ome railroad official, who opposed the bill, presented this as an ex-
treme example of how the sick ben-
| efits could work: The company
| could fire an employee for thefts. | A year later the man could be in- | jured in a fight or automobile acci-
dent and draw sick benefits at a
| rate dependent upon his one-time | railroad earnings.
Unemployment compensation for railroad workers is boosted by the new law to a maximum of $25 a week for 26 weeks. The previous | time maximum for drawing unem- | ployment. . compensation was 21 | weeks and the top rate of pay was. $4 a day.
Fund Is $750 Million
The fund now amounts to about $750 million and because of its size | no change was made in the three | per cent tax paid by the companies. | Employees do not contribute to this fund. The increased retirement annunities, survivors’ benefits and disability benefits, provided for by the new law, will be paid for jointly by em- | ployees and the companies. Beginning next Jan. 1, both companies and employees will start paying for these increased annunities {by upping their payments to the | retirement fund from the present [314 per cent each on payrolls to 5% per cent, Then, beginning in 1848, the zom- | panies and employees will both | start paying 6 per cent apiece and {in 1952 the payments by each will go to 6% per cent. Call Fund Sound Railroad retirement fund officials say this fund will be sound as long as the annual payroll of the rail- | roads amounts to at least $3.2 bil- | lion. The payrolls now total over $4 | billion, Railroad officials say the increased payments for the liberalized annuities will cost the roads $100 million annually. Survivors benefits, under the new law, will be paid in monthly annuities instead of in a lump sum |as formerly. And the change will | mean more money for the survivors. The survivors benefits are similar to, but 25 per cent higher, than those paid under the social security | act and will be paid to widows over the age of 65, to widows of anv 18 and to children under the age of 18. The minimum retirement oenefit | for a railroad employee is raised [from $40 to $50 a month, except for employees of very short service. The length of service required for eligibility for disability benefits is | reduced from 30 years to 10 years. The law also provides for payments to many widows who previously have been ineligible.
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v “9 1 I Ball Player HORIZONTAL 3 Anglo-Saxon @ Pictured base- early ball player, { f Malaysian JVernon —. . cance { ® Oratlon’s end 8 Headgear’, 1 of the ear 6 Greek letters 43 Roster / 1 Jickel 1 14 Venture 3 Oybely 8 Soft drink a7 Trim 9 Musical 18 Girl A. _>instrument W0Frentied ;g7if1eq _ 20 Preserves. 1) One time) B1 Night before 13 River duck 82 Run away to 15 Wander |, marry 16 Pieces out 25 Withers 23 Pastry 27 Preposition — 28 Germ-plasm unit ~ po He recently’ , Joined the As ‘Veracruz e— 32 Pierces 1 36 Eternity B87 Dread - B8 Bad &, #0 Elapse #4 Level C. #5 Network, #6 Indian nurse #7 Repose : j8 He left the Browns _ Pp! Soapstone } VERTICAL 3 Denomination Transpose/ (ad) } .
AS A COLD SHOWER!
A
BIG GLASS OF COLD
MILK, RICH IN NATURAL VITAMINS ° ...THE WHOLESOME ENERGIZER
‘William A. Hughes
. THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES Telephone President Heads Utilities Group in Fund Drive T0 INSURE WHEAT
-—
| William A. Hughes, president of
has been named chairman of the utilities division for the lall cam- |
|paign of the Indianapolis Com- |
‘munity Fund, Walter Leckrone, edi- | {tor of The Times and general cam- | |paign chairman, announced today. Organization of the CAM PAIgN | |executive committee, which will inelude ‘chairmen of the various so|liciting divisions is rapidly nearing completition, Mr. Leckrone said, | More than 7000 volunteer solicitors, directed by the division chairmen, will work in the campaign to raise money for 1947 needs of the Community Fund's 46 social, and welfare agencies.
Mr. Hughes has been presideéiit of |
Indiana Bell since June 1, 1946. He was vice president and general manager from January, 1944, to April 1, this year,
SPITZNAGEL TO HEAD. PLEASANT RUN POST]:
August J. Spitznagel has been reelected as commander of Pleasant Run post 144, American Legion. Other officers elected at’ a meet-
|& week for 26 weeks. Workers earn- ing in South Side Turner audito-| Legion convention parade
rium Monday were:
Laoiard R. Speth and Robert G. Schroevice commanders; Albert Seyfried, ae tant correspondent: Joseph Ritter, ad utant recorder; Joseph Schober, finance : Gagen, service officer; chaplain: Anthony D. Might at. arms, and Eugene W, Sirack. publicity officer. llowing the election, the post
made plans to be in the Indiana next |
Thomas “Arkins,
Monday.
T= lock 's
health |
LAUNCH CAPNIGN Utah Town Would Invo Atlantic Charter, Se
& WENDOVER, Utah, Aug. 7 (U, P.).—~Wendoverites served notice on + they werk or seoetle'Ssum the stath Slt
The production and marketing
|administration launched a campaign the Irdiaha Bell Telephone Co,
Utah authorities today
to insure approximately 1,500,000 take the whole town with them.
{acres of wheat to be sown this fall | for harvest in 1947, All wheat growers in the state are {eligible for federal wheat insurance
sured against damage caused by drought, winterkill, |sects, and any other natural cause! of crop losses. In Indiana this year, it was revealed that 34,984 farmers insured their wheat and it was estimated by PMA officials that approximately 50,000 bushels of wheat valued at $85,000 will be paid to growers for losses sustained on the crop just harvested. Applications to the Federal Crop Insurance Corp, should be submit ted to county AA offices not later than Sept, 14th,
INONU APPROVES CABINET ANKARA, Aug."T (U. P.).—Presi{dent Ismet Inonu today approved {a new cabinet formed by Premier Recep Peker which includes the foreign minister and three other officers of former Premier Sukru | Saracogiu’s gBvernment.
Jove | beer is stronger,
They threatened to invoke the Atlantic Charter if they are m mission to take their backyards to Nevada, where taxes are
| Wendover is the home of the| gut our population is made od
army air base that trained the B-29 people from all over the United which guarantees up to 75 per cent | crew which dropped the atom bomb | states, with a very small percents
of normal production. Crops are in-|on Hiroshima. It is on the Utah-| age of Utahans and many veterans,
{Nevada border,
The Wendover Development as-|,.iu:e a part of Nevada, lacking
flood, hail, in-| seiation asked the Utah legislature
{for help in their venture only snickers. Gov. Herbert B. Maw sald “Wendover has about as much chance of getting out of Utah as Salt Lake City.” .
Don’t Like It In Utah
But citizens of the border town don't like it in Utah. Five hundred of them already live in Nevada, which has promised to let the other 2000 in, if Utah and the U. B, congress will approve the move. Lester Giffen, head of the association, sald Wendoverites were tired of sending their children 100 miles to high school, “We have no quarrel with the way Utah wants to run Utah,” he sald in a telegram to the state senate. “That is their privilege.
but ot yetermine our way of life and
o£
“We are geographically and by
only Utah's consent to be able
8
§
have such schools 4s we need live as we desire and meet the petition we are forced to contend
Why
“We, a microscopic minority, pres fer a way of life different from the majority (in Utah) and can enjoy
tion because “this is a very pressing matter.”
0. K. BELGIAN, CABINET
BRUSSELS, Aug. 7 (U, P.).—~The Belgian chamber of deputies today voted confidence in thé new cabinet of Premier Camille Huysmans, 99 to 87.
ly (7
OF WEARING WELL
Here are
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have it because they last and last and look so lusciously
‘Above—Round -
lovely while doing i
necked, tie-belt
classic by Henry Rosen« fold. Of 85%, wool, 156% rabbit's hair, In
green, Misses’
Below—Paula
aqua and blue.
sizes, 16.985
Brooks does
1009, -wool dress in grey only, with red stitching
metal
12 to 18.
2 | Sports Shop, Second Floor
and ‘insets, and bright
buttons. Sizes EB.
»s
Bos
5 -
