Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 22 January 1947 — Page 5

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(Continued From Page One)

in office but under the mew proposal they would be deprived of one

area rent office.”

3

rents on rooms at the Indianapolis

Robert M, DeWeese, area rent director, hag announced that the

on next term.

Mayors

elected in 1047 . would

forms are now ready for use by landlords who rent out rooms in transient hotels, . residential” hotels

Cupid Finds Plane |G} | After Searchers. Of 4 Nations Fail |

SHANGHAL, Jan. 22 (U. P)— Love found a way today where the planes of four pations failed. And the world learned that a U. 8. army plane—missing since Saturday—had made a forced land-

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serve only three years, The new skip-election bill, introduced by Senator John Van Ness (R. Valparaiso) also would throw the city election of 1047 in the! hands of the present county election officials. ‘This provision would leave election boards the same as they are now, rather than set up a tity system for the lone off-year election this year, Rep. Lothair Teetor (R. Hagerstown) wrote the portal-to-portal pay bill, It provides for a limit of one year on the time for fling actions to collect back pay and would be effective 90 days after its passage

Suits on State Basis “The only way to stop these suits is to place them on a state basis,” the author said. The measure would not affect -pending portal-to-portal suits, Such actions filed in federal courts in Indiana total nearly. 150 millions, A second labor bill in the lower

great Hoosier novelist. The port

TARKINGTON MEMORIAL GIFT—"Portrait of a Man," Titian, which has been purchased from the Booth Tarkington estate and presented to Herron Art museum as a memorial to the late

Italian Renaissance poet Ariosto,

and motor courts

mentioned

tions,

rooms until they do so.

insurance Men ‘Hear by Théir ‘Man of Year’

Life Underwriters, Seattle, Wash. rait is believed to be that of the

ganizations tomorrow.

. According to the area director, such landlords may apply to the director for decontrol of daily rates on transient rooms, provided they have filled a supplemental registration form and the establishment has been classified in one of the three

classifica If the landlord has so filed and the establishment has been so classifled, then the decontrol of daily rates will become effective Feb. 15. Those who do not comply with these conditions may not apply for decontrol of daily rates for transient

High 8. Bell of the Chartered

will address local life insurance or-

house, introduced by Rep. George N. provides fines up to $500 and jail sentences to 180 days for “secondary boycott” perpetrators. It would be unlawful for employees to refuse to handle gods or perform services for employers because of some other labor dispute with. which they were in

Copeland (R. Osgood),

sympathy. Cut in Idle Payments Hoosier

employers would save

Booth Tarkington's Titian

26 Contributors Aid in Purchase Of Memorial to Late Novelist

new accession to the permanent collection of Herron Art museum.

Added to Herron Collection

The Art Association of Indianapolis today announced a valuable

Mr. Bell is a trustee of the National Association of Life Underwriters and General Agents in Seattle for the Equitable Life Insurance Co. of Iowa. He was named “Man of the Year” by Insurance Field. The Chartered Life Underwriters will-have a breakfast tomorrow for Mr, Bell at the Columbia club on “Rainbow Success in Life Underwriting.” He will speak after a noon luncheon given by the Indianapolis Association of Life Underwriters inf

ing 100 miles north of Canton, Thirteen Americans were aboard the.plane, an army graves registra= tion service transport. All were presumed safe in the village of Lienpingtung. ; i "The plane disappeared Saturday en route from Shanghai to Canton with army Supple. s CUPID drew . long bow when Warrant Officer Harry Fair, Los Angeles, Cal, decided to use the Chinese telegraph system. But his fessage to Effie Sherman, his fiancee in Shanghai, managed to survive the rigors of Oriental communications. “Hello darling,” it said, “plane made forced landing? but I'm’ safe and well. Miss you very much. Will cable from Canin Love, Harry.” » » THE MESSAGE arrived while American, British, French and Chinese planes were searching the entire Canton- ~Shanghai area, Warrant Officer Fair's message was dated Jan. 21, indicating that he couldn’t find a telegraph station for several days after the landing. If the plane’s pilot sent any messages, they still are on the way.

Tailwind Aids DC-4 To Set Speed Record

nearly $8,600,000 a year on payments into the employment security fund under a bill to be introduced in the legislature soon. The measure, outlined by the Indiana Employment Security division, was approved yesterday by the | Republican legislative policy committee. Meanwhile legislation that would make possible a $4200 salary hike for Marion county judges was under discussion in local judiciary circles. Limit Set at $14,200

+A bill Introduced in the state senate yesterday provides that cir-

celebrated Italian Renaissance poet.

painting has been presented to the museum in memory of the late novelist. Besides one anonymous donor, contributors include." Lee Burns, Joseph E. Cain, Mrs. D. Laurance Chambers, Dr. G. H. A. Clowes, Mr. and Mrs. Joseph J. Daniels, Mr. and Mrs, James W. Fesler, Mrs. Otto Frenzel, Mr. and Mrs. William C. Griffith, Mrs. Fisk Landers, Hugh McK. Landon, Eli Lilly, Charles J.

With the assistance of 26 Indianapolis contributors, the assoclation has purchased a Titian portrait, thought to be of his friend Ariosto,

Formerly in the Booth Tarkington collection, the rare 16th-century

the Hotel Lincoln. Mr, Bell will meet Indianapolis general agents and managers at dinner at 6:30 p. m. in the Marott hotel.

Stabbed in Theater, Dies, Employee Held

An Indiana avenue theater employee was held on a first-degree murder charge today, charged with

the fatal stabbing yesterday of a 17-year-old patron. Police sald Eugene Jackson, 42, the employee, admitted he®attacked | Rudolph Jack Johnson, 731 Kenny

Mrs. W. Richardson Sinclair, Lucy M. Taggart, Mrs. Booth Tarkington, Warrack Wallace, Mrs. Paul White and J. 1. Holcomb. One of the finest Renaissance pieces in the Tarkington collection, the Titian was acquired by the “gentleman from Indiana” in 1938. A small canvas (23% by 18% inches), it previously had been in the collection of Dr. Hans Tietze of Vienna.

Lemon JuiceRecipe

. empty package and ing to try as It is sold by your druggist und guarantee

cuit, superior, ctiminal, probate and Juvenile judges in this county may make up to $14,200 per year, compared with their present $10,000 annual income. Senators Hoyt Moore (R. Indianapolis) and R. L. Brokenburr (R. Indianapolis), members of the Marion county delegation, presented the measure. Any increase would be paid by the county if the board of county commissioners deemed it justifiable after being petitioned by 20 resident freeholders. Reason. for the drastic reduction in payments into the employment security fund is a $177,416,017 balance on deposit in Washington. Last year the division paid $22,300,000 in unemployment benefits, the highest amount in history, according to Noble Shaw, director. Under current rates, Mr. Shaw told the policy makers, payments into the fund this year would total

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Lynn, Mr. and Mrs. N. H. Noyes,

The Art association has not disErnest C. Ropkey, Fabien Sevitzky,

closed the purchase price.

$14,522,697. The proposed rates cut | gotte), author of the resolution, that amount to $5,956,368. said sugar supply in the U. S..has These cuts in payments into the now reached the point where sevfund would in no way affect bene-|gral refineries are closed. fits, Mr. Shaw emphasized. The| He failed to supply names of the

fund is financed entirely by em- (closed "refineries, however, when ployers, whereas 1 per.cent of work-

ers’ salary goes into the social security fund. Reform Bill Approved Passage in the senate of Governor .Gates’ convention reform bill “as it” was virtually assured following a caucus of senate Republicans. The bill, however, is expected to meet stiff opposition in the house of representatives where the Democratic minority has indicated it will set up its battleground for the fight to put over a direct primary. For the first time in Hoosier history, support of needy parents will be pinned on their children, under terms of a bill introduced yesterday in the house. Introduced by Rep. George Henley (R. Bloomington), the bill provides civil procedure to enforce support of needy parents “by ablebodied, adult children with sufii-

(D. Decatur), TOTity floor leader. !

Bill Asks Claims On Welfare Funds

Two House Republicans today introduced a bill to create a State claim against the property of all recipients of old age assistance. The measure would give recipients choice of withdrawing from assistance or to permit a lien to be placed against their property. It also provides recovery without interest from the estate of the deceased recipients, the claim being

subsequent to costs of administration, taxes, etc.

The bill was introduced by Laurence D. Baker (R. Kendallville)

a

{mittee meetings yesterday.

jclent means.” Await Committee Reports

Committees were expected to re- Senate Passes Bill port on more than a dozen bills

after the first real round of com- 10 Refuse U.S. Aid

and Roscoe Kitt (R. Huntington).

A resolution to “bring state government back to Indiana” was passed in the state senate today. The resolution, which passed the ouse earlier in the session, calls {for refusal of federal grants and

Eight committees met yesterday | to discuss some of the 93 bills in{troduced so far in the house. Unitil yesterday, only six of the bills; |h had been acted upon. The house yesterday adopted a|ai4 by the state. resolution to ask the national con- Following a brief party fight, the gress to end sugar rationing and|resolytion was adopted by vote of control. 34 to 11. The Republican-sponsored Rep. Samuel L. Rlely (R. Wyan-| measure denounced federal aid and Advertisement

subsidies for welfare, const: on BUILD DUP RED ) BLOOD lof buildings and highways.

Allied Leaders tetders to i Medals From France If your blood LACKS IRON! You girls and women who suffer so

PARIS, Jan. 22 (U. P.).—French military = medals - soon will be! from simple anemia that you're pale, weak, “dr out"—this may be

awarded to Premier Josef Stalin,| Winston: Churchill, Generalissimo {Chiang Kai-shek, Gen. Charles De due to lack of blood-iron. So try | Gaulle, ‘and posthumously, to FrankLydia E. Fiaihang TAB ET oe {lin D. Roosevelt. The medals are in Cad ea ome WAYS to build UP | recognition of their handling of Tablets are one of the Sroatent blood: allied operations against the axis fron tonics you can u pli ek 48 Hae y En | powers, the foreign ministry said.

Lydia E. Pinkham's TABLETS | | Serving Indiana’s Newest | DAILY Indiana's Finest I] 12 Noon to DINE -AT 2AM] ANDREWS

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RESTAURANT Our Chapel

asked to do so by Robert Heller

ave. after he accused the youth of creating a disturbance in the Lido theater, 786 Indiana ave. Jackson said he ordered the youth into the lobby to “quiet him.” He said Johnson grabbed him. Jackson jerked a knife from his pocket and stabbed the youth under the left arm, he told police.

120 Hurt as Train. Hits Crowded Bus

MUSKEGON, Mich., Jan. 21 (U. P)—~Twenty persons were injured last night when a Pennsylvania freight train struck a city bus at a Muskegon crossing during a blinding snowstorm. Police said only two bus passengers were in ‘serious condition.

BOSTON, Jan. 22 (U.P). — A new Chicago-to-Boston speed record for commercial planes has been set by a four-engined United Air Lines plane, It covered the distance in 3 hours’ and 25 minutes with the aid of ay75-mile-an-hour tailwind: Capt. Norman F. Timper, Watertown, Mass, said he averaged 297

miles an hour, but at times winged along at 310.

4 Die as Train

‘Smashes Truck

IRVING, 1, Jan. 22 (U. P.).— Four persons, including a father and his two teen-aged sons, were killed yesterday when their truck was struck by a speeding New York Central passenger train. The victims were James Eubank, 40, and his sons, Ervin, 14, and Fred, 17, and Billy (Case) Cox, 20 son of an Irving, Ill, farmer. The truck was struck by the. south-

(Continued From Page one)

Mr, Wilson said. The be linked with General Motors’ ac-

a car, he added. » Speaks to Mayors Both steps stemmed from the fact the OPA control ended with Ford prices ranging higher than G. M. prices, according to Mr. Wilson. He discussed prices, production, and labor problems during a Washington visit-in which he spoke’ to the U. 8. conference of mayors, General Motors doesn’t look for another big strike when union contracts run out in the spring, he said.Mr. Wilson would like to hold wages about where they are and work on the problem of leveling out production, increasing output, and enlarging supply lines, he said. A big jump in wages—one causing an increase in prices—would merely add to the national inflation, in’ Mr. Wilson's opinion. Over the last 20 years the price of an auto and the value of wages have not moved more than 10 per. cent apart, he pointed out. Increase in volume of production will not have a. direct effect on the cost ‘of cars, Wilson contended. Present G. M. prices are based on an assumption of 80 per cent of theoretical capacity production, an assumption which wasn't schiéved in 1946, but which G. M. hopes to reach in 1947.

Copyright, 1047, by The Indianapolis Tin righ Chicago ‘Daily Nove Ino ny

Marine Awaits - Fate

In Court-Martial PEIPING, Jan. 22 (U.P).—AU.S. marine corps court-martial went into secret session today to recommend a sentence for Cpl. William G. Pierson on a charge that he raped a Chinese coed. The court

him,

Failure to free a defendant of a charge against him at the end of his trial normally is tantamount, under navy court-martial procedure, to a conviction. The case has provoked antiAmerican demonstrations in several Chinese cities.

Overcome by Fumes As She Talks on Phone

Mrs. Flora Powell, 48, of 5368 Winthrop ave, was recovering at St. Vincent's hospital today after being overcome by fumes from a gas furnace. She was talking by telephone to a son, Herman, 28, of the same ad-

,| dress, when she lost consciousness,

police were told. The son, realizing his mother had fallen, summoned

bound train at an Irving crossing.

Twenty were hospitalized, but 10/ were released after treatment. Remaining passengers of the 45! aboard -the bus- when the :crash occurred were given first aid on the! spot.

wa ~ aes bo

IN INDIANAPOLIS

- EVENTS TODAY

National executive committee meeting, American Legion auxiliary,

MARRIAGE LICENSES

Leonard Parher, 5331 Washington blvd.; Evelyn Stein, 3541 N. Merid James David Core en, 1040 a Anna Elizabeth Lynch, 1130 W. New

Bivard J. Bruner, 1119 N. Capitol; | nces Stevenson, 1122 Oliver, Willie Hamilton Mason, 2020 N. Pennsylvania; Allegra B. Roberts, 439 Leeds. William Howard Mello oy, 1930 College; | Betty Johnston, 1233 Broadway, James C. Stoltz, 1332 W. Market; Ostors, 105 Sree

Mount;

Martha | Jua- |

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Ala Miller Bie N " Meridian; Riverview dr. Schel nberg, Beech Grove; Gris R Ritchie Ty Hi Balters Jr., Pr. Sheridan, I; Dorot Jean Carlyle, 436 Minerva. ra L. Hunt, 249 N. Belle Vieu; Hazel Sandberg, 349 N. Belle Vie Thomas A. Combs, 527 W. “3tn: Jennie | 868 W. Nor tb. Goff ‘Union; Mary E.! m List; Rémitha | Mitchell 1913 Hovey.

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