Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 24 October 1946 — Page 4

‘for reelection. iness others, but as you may know,

"sotion, and while Like bas been impressed upon me

: Waking Se on the ballot is {agly grateful for your suppor may be able to

tha

wasn't there.” In the primary, Mr f the 3th conseeutive: time

¢ CHILDREN VICTIMS AS CRASH KILLS 6

LACON, III, ‘Oct. 24 (U. PJ)~

#58 sor verslane

i

© of ‘a railroad crossing accident * which killed six persons, four of ° them small children. The dead, members of two families, were riding in an sutomo- ' pile which was struck by the Santa Pe Streamliner Chief late yesterAuthorities said there apparently were no witnesses. They Jelieves,

sman Campaigns By Card T shall have to depend on my friends to wage In the past it has

to me to devote myself to the ‘in the early summer I. suffered .

gi ae severe case of influenza n I an well along the

ng the stump in my own behalf,

speak to friends and feighbors in my behalf, Faithfully yours,

Jidy didlyes

flood of cards like this one, Congressman Louis Ludlow campaigning for re-election as the “sandidate who

"Authorities today sought the cause

U.S. REQUESTS CLARIFICATION OF PROPOSAL

Doubts = Soviet for International Inspection.

By NAT A. BARROWS Times Special Writer LAKE SUCCESS, N, Y,, Obt. 24.— A quiet little fishing expedition, in the troubled and muddy watérs of

een a source ervice of

and: consequent refoad to recovery, it t my strepgth is not yot equal B-12. I shall be everlaste t and any good word which you

Mr, Ludlow won Democratic nominawithout even showing his face in

onto the tracks after a freight train had passed, and that the driver's view of the oncoming streamliner was obstrjicted by the freight. The dead were Mrs, Oatherine Perry, 27, and her two children, Leland, 2, and Joan, 5, and Mrs, Ellen Warnick and her two daughters, Barbara, 8, And Janet, 5.

————— A —— STILL PROBE GOERING DEATH . NUERNBERG, Oct. 2¢ (U, P). — U. 8. army spokesmen said today that a three-man military board {investigatiug the suicide of Her mann Goering still was in session,

sembly's first day, | this Soviet activ- § ity ‘gives another hint of the im- = pending battle of words and wits = between the Communists and the * democracies. # At the moment, it is lost amid

Is, Ready

»

THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

ranium Report Held ‘Tih

5

THURSDAY, OCT. PS

hing’ Expedition

# *

Cl

THU

Receives. Citation

Lt. Col. William C. Smith (left), - USMCR, 4205 E. 35th st. received a letter of commendation from the secretary of navy for his work in organizing, recruiting and training the 16th infantry battal-

* come Begun.

Times Foreign Service

tribute income.

recently

lower, or working class brackets.

ENGLAND'S TAX ROLL REDUCED:

Pledge to Redistribute In-

LONDON! Oct 24.—In the fleld of taxation, Britain's labor government is serious about its pledge to redis-

A total of 2,500,000 taxpayers have been lopped off the rolls from 1946‘47. For the 10,500,000 persons who will still pay income tax, the government emphasized relief in the

— from: $156 ast year to $54 this year. The measure of relief contracts rapidly as income mounts. A $4000 man’s taxes drop from $1204 to $964. $20,000 ‘ blighter will notice less difference in his tax reduction, from $11,028 last year to $10,172 this year. The tax on a $40,000 income is reduced from $27,128 to $25,868. The worker still pays tréemendous indirect taxes.: A package “of 20 cigarets costs about 48 cents, of which 38 dents is tax. Beer is simi{larly taxed high. The government expects in 1946-47 to get $1,248,000,000 in beer taxes and $1,700,000,000 in tobacco taxes. This high excise tax which a worker pays for his tobacco and beer is. partly recouped by his wife at the market, in the form of food subsidies. The government 1s spending $1,300,000,000 in the com-

FIRM TO SELL 7500 PRE-FABS AT COST

WASHINGTON, Oct. 24 (U. P). —Housing Expediter Wilson Wyatt today cleared the way for produc-

‘tion of 7500 plywood houses to bel’

sold to veterans at an erected cost of about $6800. ne The houses wilY be factory<built by American Fabricators, Lovisville, Ky. Two*hundred will be produced this year, the remainder, next year. Mr, Wyatt directed -the Reconstruction Finance Corp. to guarantee the sale of 2000 of the houses, under the “guaranteed -market” clause of the veterans housing act.

FARLEY IN TOKYO

atomic energy control has been| lon of the marine corps reserve. | The head of a family with two, ; “TOKYO, Oct. 24 (U. P.) James started by the Russians, The citation was presented by Lt. | children, if he had an income of Te - for this Purpose: A. Farley, former U. 8. postmaster Oe spokesman satd toAlmost unnoticed in the excite-| Col. Carey A. Randall (right); |$1200 in the 1945-46 tax year, paid), , Co boost cstate. taxes. in the|Seneral, arrived by plane today from day that Britain had sent a note to ment SUrroUNding se nn USMC, Inspector - instructor of [a tax of $39. In 1946-47 he pays higher strata. e Peipinig, China, He was expected | Sofia protesting against a ban on the- United Na- * f ("| the organized marine corps re- nothing. If his income in both Convent” 194d. to remain in Tokyo for about three publication of a United States note tions general as- | serve’ battalion of Indianapolis. | years was $1600, his tax cut is nearly | “*P{R" I oe ewe Tne. m** [days on private business. concerning Bulgarian elections.

At Least He's Honest About It

SEATTLE, Oct, 24 (U. P).— One “homeless, but “undaunted Seattle family pays no heed to the landlords’ strike. The following classified ad appeared yesterday .in The Seattle Times: “Must rent furnished large apt, We have 4-year-old boy, house broken, who will drive nails into your piano and crayon the walls, but good. I beat the ears off the old woman when I get drunk, The neighbors are always squawke ing about the noise we make, That's why we are homeless, Call Sundays. . . . "

PROTESTS BAN ON U, 8. NOTE Oct. 2¢ (U.P). — A

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nina CTT

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E lit is seén definitely as. more than

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the spectacular shuffle of bands; speeches and diplomatic handshaking with which the Bl-nation assembly started its long deliberti | tions, But, significantly, it gives some hint of things to come. Russia, despite its utter refusal to {| accept the American atomic control

4 i’

point proposition for supervising uranium mines in évery country. Sounded Well at First It proposes what the Soviet ‘spokesman, Prof. 8. P. Alexandrov, {calls an international balance sheet, listing the amount of ore already | |lextracted and potentially workable, iland it seeks also to require each country to reveal its system for mining atomic raw materials, That sounded well enough. At first hearing, other committee members were delighted that the Soviet silence had been broken. But an overnight analysis brought a raising of eyebrows snd a care-fully-worded request from the United States for further clarifications, What the United States did not ask ‘was why the Soviets should expect the uranium-producing countries to give up their secrets of ore extraction when Russia itself refuses to accept the principle of in-| ternational inspecition. Even though the Alexandrov | statement calls for an international | = balance sheet of extraction statis-|= tics, few realists here would expect to get accurate figures from such a state monopoly as the Soviet mines. Bluft Called, If It Is Bluft There still is no provision for a double check from the outside—or international inspection of any kind. On that point the Americans are firm; no sharing of the atomic know-how without United Nations inspection. It boils down to tHe conclusion that the Soviets are starting their campaign to hold the initiative in all possible United Nations deliberations. It is interpreted by those close to the atomic problem as something] more than meets the casual eye and |

Ws

COTIOTIESIIIISN ITI TENETI1111]

merely a move to get’ the Russian

There is talk that Molotov him- | self may supplant Gromyko if the E | atomic commission reaches a point |= where the impasse between Russia | and the United States comes into the open again, The United States, at this point, | seems to be holding the reins. It] has asked for more specific infor- | mation from the Russians about |

= wn ~ »” 3.9 ® 8 3 3 » = a oT = 5 1 ® - 2 ao a

proposal--and, in so many words, called the bluff, if it is a bluff.

= Copyright, 1946, by The India apoli Times i The Ch icago Daily Ne ine = | ( FLOWERS ge IN STONE

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