Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 31 December 1946 — Page 2
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White House Skeptic’ Of GOP Proposal > By MERRIMAN SMITH —WASHINGTQN, Dec. 31. —Presi- | dent Truman not intend to recommend a general income tax cut to the new congress, White House sources sald today. According to these informants, Mr. Truman believes government tax revenue must be kept at current levels to pay off the national debt. He was represented to feel that the public should pay high taxes now while “times are good.” The sources were skeptical of reports that the President might advocate a tax reduction for lowerbracket wage earners through higher exemptions. They pointed out that even a small increase In exemptions would cost the government billions, Estimate $5-Billion Cost : At the same time, the. White House informants strongly doubted the feasibility of a 20 per cent, across the board tax reduction, as proposed by some Republicans,
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HOAX FORGIVEN—Pvt, James M. Hill today admitted that his story of foiling «a an attempted tobbery while on sentry duty at Hamilton Field, Cal., was a hoax. His They astimbted Jock ¢ Et hold! fiancee, Rosemary Watson (right), immediately announced she still wants to tarry him, yearly interest charge on the na-| but he must yet make his peace with military autharities.
sensing
ommend Gen CB Put Atom First, U. S. Urges UN
international energy.
to postpone general debate untl next
on the council, submitted a formal resolution asking the council to give “first priority to the establishment ‘of international control over atomic energy and, accordingly, it will con- | sider and act upon the forthcoming report. of the atomic energy commission as soon as received.”
ures it should take and in what order of priority for the implementation of the general assembly
Iresolution m
U. 8. and other countries would have disarmament proposals. He said they should get simultaneous consideration,
to Mr, Johnson, Soviet Measure Called ‘Practical’
sponsored by Bernard Baruch was age of 13 and had had some of his scheduled to go before the security early: ballads published by the time council within two weeks. .
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7 ‘TUESDAY, DEC. 31, 1948
eral Income Tax C
SE
Charles Wakefield Cadman, Song Composer, Dead at 65
LOS ANGELES, Dec. 31 (U. PQ —Death today claimed Charles Wakefield Cadman, 65, the second noted American composer to suc. cumb here in three days. Mr. Cadman, stricken with a heart ailment three days ago, died yesterday at California Lutheran hospital, His close personal friend, Carrie Jacobs Bond, died Saturday. At Cadman's bedside was his sister, Mrs. Matthew Cascino. The funeral will be Thursday afternoon at Forest Lawn, ‘The prolific composer, whose versatility earned him the title of the “American Saint-Saenz” created more than 300 songs, including the favorites “From «The Land of the Sky-Blue Water” and “At Dawning.” Born in Pennsylvania His work ranged through music for piano, violin and chorus to the symphony and most often reflected the beauty of American Indian ballads. He created an Indian opera, “Shanewis,” which was the first by an American ever to be staged for |two seasons by the Metropolitan Opera company of New York. Besides writing music, Mr. Cadman played well on the plano, organ and cello, He got a job as a church organist in Pittsburgh with-
2
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Eckert Hearing Set Thursday
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partment. Col. Killian said this situation had been cleared up to his satisfaction more than a year ago.
(Continued From Page One)
control of atomic
The security council then decided
Wife's Job Involved
Another “charge” against Capt. "| Grinstead was that his wife was
eek. Herschel Johnson, U. S. delegate
direct connection with a tavern operation or any place dealing in liquor would be forbidden. How ever, the governor's rules cannot be applied to state police officers, who operate under a stringent merit system of their own, it was under stood. Both Maj. Eckert Grinstead were called before Col. Killlan yesterday after the supere intendent had conferred with the governor on the charges against them. Only the major was suse pended, however, Wants to Clear Self Maj. Eckert said he was primarily interested in clearing himself of the drunken driving charge and that, in view of the nearness of his retirement date, reinstatement was only a secondary consideration. His
Other Plans Expected “The council will thereafter conder what further practical meas-
(on general disarmaent),” the resolution stated. Mr. Johnson pointed out that the
STRICKEN — Charles Wakefield Cadman, 65, prolific American song composer, died yesterday in Lbs Angeles, two days after his close friend, Carrie Jacobs Bond, also a composer,
Andrei Gromyko of Russia replied
Mr. Gromyko insisted that the [Out ever having taken an organ bed’ retirement will not be affected by council consider the Soviet resolu- 1€8S0n. succumond. the suspension beyond cutting the tion first because it was a “prac- | Mr. Cadman was born in 1881 in a : . Smbunt of his pension 49 a Smal tical” measure while the U. 8. pro- Johnstown, Pa., member of a fam- sum cause o e few months posal was “abstract.” He said ve !ily prominent in Pennsylvania muli- Organizations lacked to reach retirement age. was no justification for delay. {cal circles. Detective Capt. Robert O'Neal The American atomic control plan | He began studying piano at the! rue iadies' auxiliary to the Interna-| Was named to the executive post
tional Association of tachinists 278 will during Maj. Eckert’s suspension and
meet at 8 p. m. Thursday in the Machin- : ists hall, 49'2 8. Delaware st. Mrs, P.|Detective John Barton succeeds {C. Romer, will be In'cant O'Neal temporarily.
charge.
acting president,
'he was 20.
TE hho
5% — ‘Meet America's Truman Declares ‘Number One Liar Hostilities Ended i Y¥., won honorable mentions for
(Continued From Page One) (Continued From Page One)’ | heir tall tales. | (Continued From Page One)
tional debt. Sy . .on Meanwhile, bi-partisan opposition | From Army Hero To Sad Sack No. 1 10 dali ACK NO. A farmer friend of Mr. Nedrow's |
to a 20 per cent Tut developed in| the tax-writing house ways and | means committee. Rep. Harold | Knutson (R. Minn), who is in line | | tion ready by Jan. 27. and mines already seized may be |a window in the finance office with | Express Opposition held by the government for six angered an Alaska mosquito One|the end of my gun. Then I got| . \ | | Two Republican committeemen, months more—until June 30, 1947, day while sinking fence posts. The | scared and started shooting so I however, expressed outrignt opposi- Mine ‘Contract Awaited | mosquito went off to get his gang, | could claim robbers had done it.
| to become | kie fro Robinson, Ill, | tion to a cut of that size although | py was under this law that Mr. ..q4 when they returned, one |, The rookie mn
committee chairman, | both believed some tax relief WAS Truman last May seized the na- xplained that he was nervous at;
said again yesterday that such & reduction was possible. He prompeeled off in a terrific power dive | peing “stuck on sentry dufy” the |
{sed to have the necessary legisla-
necessary. {tion's soft coal mines. The mines yr Rep. Bertrand W. Gearhart (R. json : under federal control, They at Mr. Nedrow's friend who side- | very night pe was supposed to have Cal.) said he favored graduated 'aX | wi) continue to be until mine op- stepped just in time. foess martial. ok be was itadverts) reduction instead of Mr. Knutson's ergtors and the United Mine Work-| The mosquito was going so fast | ely a Loge ani
across-the-board proposal. {ers (A. F. of L) negotiate a con- ' pull out in time “I believe we should give the tract. At present the mines are pe- | that he couldn't p greatest relief to the taxpayers ining operated under a contract the bottom level and the least &t|gioned last May between. John L. Besah OVI th top,” Mr. Gearhart sald. | Lewis, U. M. W. president, and the farmer an idea. He beg v § | cisco. He described a 20 per cent cut ertment around the field, ducking every time, .g 0 yu sand by him” Miss a government, i ) . h! " ] as “rather drastic’ and TecOM- while the specific seizure power is mosquito dived at him. Eachico io wid today. “I still think] mended that congress look fOr terminated, it has been pointed out mosquito wound up with his Pro- ,. wong of him. And he hasn't] other sources of revenue before ny om nls that the government in boscis sticking in the ground. When |done so much. He hasn't commit- | a income taxes too heavily » Ny ” oh write {i able to in all were trapped the farmer shot ted any crime.” Bt ar 4 : tingers and | Cut Hard to Achieve | voke _general emergency Yowers to Ds vig And ea pig ly Fire at Wet Bushes | sei ke-bound facilities where Another Republican committee- | ¥5¢ SKC 0 eeted. | Mr. Kleinstuber's story told of | Army officials and the FBI prob-| ¥ 3 » Oarl T. Curtis of Nee, Sugar rationing and rent con- the remarkable hybrid animal bred {ably wouldn't have been so gullible | braska, said he thought a 20 per , _iby a friend. It seems the friend had it not been for the sensitive | Wels are nut adetied hy ine pres ad beagle hound with a tom | imaginations of the military police | ¢ a | { rat ‘The result was a wierd animal reinforcemefits, They answered Jim- | {that looked a little like a dog but my’'s call for the corporal of the ! ! guard.
\through the finance office window, |} and rammed his stinger into the pn. said his bride-to-be was “wait- | frozen ground. That gave the ing at the church” in San Fran-|
wold be hard to achieve. He wored & reduction that would ldential proclamation. : “treat all groups alike.” Rent control authority «is ‘coms “But I do not want to see taxes tained in the OPA extension act ; F reduced unless we can achieve a Which ends next June 30, Sugar Meowed lik a cat. oo balanced budget ahd set up a debt rationing authority is contained in Th dog-cat has proved invaluable | i ; tiremen 5 " h id another statute. for catching catfish. It stands near Sentry’s story, they deployed themn yO et The i |the edge of the water and meows. [Selves strategically behind jeeps and Democratic members of the com- Foreign Service Limited i
mittee likewise opposed Mr. Knut- Mr Truman's action also means The catfish come into shallow] trained their guns on the terrain
water to investigate. While they |Where Pvt. Hill indicated the “ban-| . son's proposal, but they saw little the end, effective immediately, of a A . Ie dop.eat swims dits” had withdra hope of blocking it are assembling, the dog-c wn ne : jtax-free shipments
cizarets, around between them and deep The driving rain and wind-lashed | cigars and tobacco to .servicemen, Water.
5 Then he barks like a dog foliage did the rest. * . Fields' Wife It also ends | y |
and the frightened fish leap onto| After the battle was over, the | dry land where the animal nurses training program. The War (em in the nearest sapling. - tiepartment pointed out, however, {a ~ Pr otege Disagree pil be J Driveiless Bus (Continued From Page One) | enlisted man will be required io “ae hard-drinking comedian gave her spend more than two years in cer- [ B I in long ago. tain foreign stations. “1 haven't wound it since he died,! Cancelled Immediately is the Christmas day. But the hands keep statute, walving certain immigra-
moving, not keeping time, but slow- tion restrictions for workers imly. He's speaking to me, through ported from western hemisphere
+
of
the armed forces
| figures of “at least six men” scur- | |rying away into the darkness. One military policeman solemnly
that no army nurses are in train- ’ reported having seen one of the]
ng now. enemy stumble when he was Henceforth, no army officer or “winged” in the hail of lead from
{the defending forces. Officers explained today that the! IM. P's shat at rain-drenched | | bushes moving in the wind, | Comedy of Errors - foundation and the side, about 15, The story ‘was even more believfeet from the curb, was smashed. aple in view of the fact” that the
(Continued From Page One)
that watch. |countries. This does not affect : a “I feel closer to him now than I last year's law providing for the Seven Fade Nene Jamanged. finance office of the San Francisco ever have. I've never been a mother, admission of agricultural workers. Sop Pos ey, operator of the radio presidio actually had been robbed
but it must be sort of mother love | "End in 6 Months } Se ym. Hes Deer sick 80! wartime laws which will end “7 was near him much of that SiX months unless extended by con-
by burglars only 24 hours earlier. “It was all a comedy of errors,’ Indianapolis Railways officials said Col. Jerry Page, the base executime—18 months when he was in gress, include: said. the driver William Hinesley, tive officer. The young kid was
721 N. Gladstone, parked the bus Scared to death when he broke the the sanitarium the first time. I was| The Smith-Connally war labor = 0", "0" oo bo" ectablishment, Window. He just got himself deeper
hers every dav. all day, from TW | daputes act. This means that the ge left it in geAr and did not put and deeper into the web at every : i Athi -ak . al turn. Wanted No Funeral government must relinquish within on the handbrake, officials said. | g Ser six months any plant, mine or other, The bus, one of the new Macks “But when the FBI announced The pretty protege's appearance | : delivered last March, was slightly they would keep trying to solve ‘at Mr. Plelds' funeral would be a facility seized under the act. damaged. the case, even after Pvt. Hill left direct challenge to Mrs, Harriet! The statue of limitations, par-| A geetcar crash also was re- for his assignment in Germany, the Fields, the comedian’s estranged | ticularly as it applies to prosecu- ported today. A College streetcar, kid broke down and confessed it was {tion of any person held responsible operated by Clinton A. Ginn, 2334 & hoax. wife, who announced through her . yA , . for any part in the Pearl Harbor Roosevelt av /as | 1lisi ith! “He didn't want to chance some | e ave. Was In collision wi attorney that the family did not | disaster, Thus, Lt. Gen, Walter C. a car operated by Charles B. Jones, |innocent man being caught and want to see Miss Monti at Forest Short and Rear Adm. Husband E. 34, of 1903 Yandes st. There were no prosecuted for 2 huethine Hoy did Lawn Thursday morning. Kimmel, army and navy comman-! injuries, not happen,” the officer said. Miss Monti said it was entirely 9ers in charge at Pearl Harbor Col. Page said Pvt. Hill would be up to Mr. Fields. She said the kind | When the Japanese struck Dec. 7, . . taken off guard duty and given of funeral arrangements Mrs. Plelds 1941, could not be prosecuted after Chiang Signs New Law some other chore. He will probably had made were exactly what Mr, June 30. | NANKING, Dec. 31 (U. P.).— go on K.P~until the commanding Fields did not want. Members of the armed forces Generalissimo Chiang Kai-shek officer, Col. John A. Feagin, deMr. Fields left written Instruc-| Overseas will lose the privilege of signed the new Chinese constitu- | cided whether punishment ' was tions that no one should view his Pringing into this country duty- tion today, It will come into effect necessary.
body after death and that it should | free gifts not exceeding $50. on Christmas day, 1947. me — be cremated and the ashes scat-| 1” xl C Id New Year's Eve Forecast
tered. Mrs. Fields and their son, W. C. (Continued From Page One) | ination shivered under the cold
Fields Jr, in a “compromise agreement” between their “religious! wave. f The weatherman said New Year's
and Mr. Fields’ abhor-! rence of being buried in'the ground eve would be cold and “snappy” in| {a wide area from the Rocky moun-
purchased a mausoleum crypt, Ra Willed Little to Wife Another battle between © Mrs. . Plelds and Miss Nonti was expected [tains to the Atlantic seaboard, ex{cept for the southern tip of the | Florida peninsula. L | The mercury skidded to a low of
after Mr. Fields’ will is filed for '42 degrees below zero during the
day. Friends said it left ‘of an estimated $800,000 | night at Bemidji, Minn., and dipped | to 28 degrees at Texarkana, Ark.
A an orphanage, also | The thermometer registered 35
remembered his protege, but gave {below early today at International |Falls, Minn, 17 below at Mason
little to his wife and son. Mr. Plelds and Miss Monti met | City, Ia. 18 below at Presque Isle, |Me., 14 below at Lebanon, N. H, and
Paramount lot in 1932, when 3 below in northern Illinois. A fine, sunny day was predicted
working in the same picfor the. Rose Bowl game in Cali-
ir friendship continued, - CHRISTMAS SEAL SALESMEN — High-point winners in the (ornia, but gridiron fans in most annual sale of tuberculosis Christmas seals at Technical high school other sections were warned to are (seated) Douglas Porler and Evelyn Petrovich and (standing, bundle up or take along an um-
in Bus Slightly Damaged*
but we got over e said. the last person
rons
Having no reason to doubt the |||
trees |M. Ps swore they had seen dark|}
Wishing you a New Year
filled with happiness, health, friendship and GOOD CHEER!
he Most Beautiful Thing rrvY
... “How simple,” said the patriarch. “In any church of any creed you'll find it. For FAITH is the most beautiful thing in the world.” ’
... “LOVE,” said the young bride. “Love gilds poverty into riches . . . sweetens bitter tears . . . makes much of very little! Without it, there is no beauty. With it, beauty
is everywhere.”
... “PEACE,” answered the soldier. “For war is the most ugly. Wherever you find PEACE you find Beauty.”
. . . Father Time pondered these answers ... “FAITH, LOVE, PEACE” . .. all three can be found in our own households . . . for in the eyes of our children is FAITH, faith in the world and all mankind; LOVE shines in their eyes and in a wife and husband's cheery, understanding smile , , , PEACE that we long for abounds. ...
And Fie Called it HOME
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INDIANA'S STORE FOR THE HOME
deft to right) Loiann Lowery, and Dorothy Lysk. (brella.
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Taft % ‘Jobs (
Capehe To All
By RAY! WASHINGT A, Taft (R. O. Republican plum . Senator Taft as ‘the strong session of the ti ments, and the helped prepare out change, Victorious in {ship tests, backe gram drove ah | dole out disputed | ments in accord: {posals of the sla vl |. The actual t Ml icommitiee assign ithe chairmanshij ito an eight-mah Senator Edward Wyo.). Senator H Ind) is one me
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mittee, | That group st threats of rebe
from: Senators | (R. N. H) and Kas.). Both are y for the chairmai mittee on inter commerce, and b pear before the group today.
Vandenberg
Senator Tobey the leadership but met defeat a the pre-arrangec leaders was appr P. conference wi The conferen leaders: Senator Arthu (R. Mich.), nom pro tempore (no of the senate), Senator Wallac Me.), majority fi Senator Eugen Colo.), conference Senator Kenne Neb.), majority w Senator Milton . DJ), conferent The conferenc Carl A. Loeffler, since he became De senate secreta McGinnis, Chica banker, to be serg jobs pay $12,000 : Willis Nof Four former s mentioned previo most important . Vandenberg mer Senator Rot Prog. Wis.) for Raymond E. Will Shiphead (R. M Senator Rufus C. had been suggest: rms, Mr. Taft hims e Robertson gre ommittee assign manships, He also was nd probable « bteering committe d during the 79 group’ becomes der the Repul e New congress ation and seeks t party policy. Mr. Tobey obje: pointing the sam teering committe on committee,
3 Ex-G. | n Auto |
Three young ured, two serio ide traffic ‘accide "An automobile Johnson, 23, of F he trio were p ith a tractor-tr Delaware sts. Injured were R irklin, broken js Wilbur Hutchisol pack injuries, and 9, Frankfort, poth serious. All x ospital, to be rer . 8. Veterans’ h Driver of the Rhodes Jr., 23, of A 22-year-old ichols, 2047 Ada ury when his a vith an Indianap locomotive this mi scape arrest, ho pf reckless drivin railroad crossing William H. Mor roy ave. was en; otive. The acci dams st. and the
Pacific Com TOKYO, Dec. Douglas MacArt! ommand of nava he Philippines, e Marianas at n line with Pr flirective calling | and over far orces overseas.
CIN
BIRTHS
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Tw t St. Vincent's -Ra len Grady, girls, Gi t St. Frane Melvi and Charles, "Violet t City . Lu
nes, Methodist Oris, rick, Rose Miles: man, and James, M t St. Vincent's Fra per, Ellen Gregory, drix; John, Jane ann: Raymond, Ruth Seal, and RI t Emhardt-—John, M ary Groves; Alb and Charles, Paulin 1 N;, Sheldon st.; J 1814 Deloss st., Lei 1840 Sugar Grove s Hoover, 824 N. Eas
Bo . Francis— Hare
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Caudle, and Willia Coleman—James,
