Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 25 August 1947 — Page 3

J

3

INCLUDING!

Cy y 7, ow....13.78 now...9.78 reno] 99 ally 42.50, een sa3.50

JRNITURE

...-59.50 sriginally reee4.89.50 aes 4478

RE ]

ally

OVE SEATS,

..295.00 es, SOFA,

+. +..200.00

VMODE, We... 562.50

CH OPENs inally ceels 124.78

ING TABLE, veers 119.78

MODE, 5.00. ..62.50

. originally cress. 69.50

HAIR, origs vees. 139.50

KK originally

used, origs .10¢ to 598 | AND MOD« |

1.00 to 4.98 FLOOR

S TS, origina «.. 1.38 ea,

the back of vasines 108s

> put in res vee 0c ea,

s, originally

.es:25¢c ea,

IFER to pul >d fresh,

beater fos

es only ong .+«.75¢ 08 ,

y vee. 10c ot

CE POT, vee. 69 of 9% and nd 2.25 I8-in. dry is esvanl,

| patterns, ee. 10e roll

de, to paind esves oh4Y

1432..1.98 ss, originally

ho 19.98 ea

|

< AGS, were

AGS, were tases 598

VERNIGHT, sven 1198 |

UITCASES, | ene 1695 |

JUITCASES, ...22:60

SUITCASE, ten .24.50

), Were 34350 ; 45.00, iene 2198

ILDREN'S | y 2.63 to 1.13 +0 3.38 R

as is 49.78

= ho : 4

rE

MONDAY, AUG. 25, 147

attle

Big B Tax League Blasts $1.80 Budget Figure

Council Approval Expected Tonight

Indiana Taxpayers’ association in-| dicated today it was preparing to fight for further reductions in the city’s $1,80 tax rate for 1948 pos-| aibly even with court action. The association, represented by Walter Horn at the city council's budget meetings, declared its ob--Jections to several points in the spending sheet for next year. The council will adopt the budget at a meeting vonight in city hall, Mr. Horn pointed to the increase in property assessment values for next year and declared the “tax-| payers should be given more bene-| fit from this raise than will be af-| forded by the $1.80 rate.” Bigger Spending Sheet Although the $1.80 rate is 23.5 cents lower than the current civil city rate of $2.035, the 1048 rate will raise $15,500,000. The expenditure for the current year was $13,750,000. The increased expenditures with 8 lower tax rate are due to increased property valuation, anticipated outlays from a $1 million fund accumulated by the Indianapolis Redevelopment commission and higher anticipated revenues for 1948 than the controller's original estimate. The taxpayers group also voiced objection to the budget of the sanitation department which was not submitted to the council for yinclusion in the budget ordinance. The department's rate was estabUshed at 22 cents by the sanitation commissioners. Recommend Change Since the budget was not a part

of the regular ordinance the council was powerless to review or*change|

In Indianapolis — Vital Statistics

Laura

the spending sheet. It is the first time that the department has set its own rate without submitting it to the council for seview. Prank J. Noll Jr., city clerk, recommended to Mayor Denny, Council President John A. Schumacher and Herman Bowers, chairman of the council's finance committee,

the sanitation department’s budget

! the northwest in the morning to

that |

1

i

=n

NRO NAN

Y M REG PAT'S PEND COPR 1947 NATIONAL 24-HOUR FORE-

CAST: “The heat wave which

has gripped the plains states almost without a break since July 4 has been broken. Cool air which has been building up in a high pressure cell in central Canada will push in behind the cold air front from Maine to Texas. (See POTOCAST.) This outbreak of cool air will send the mercury into the 50s in the northern plains. By tomorrow afternoon the mercury will climb into the T0s in this area. Tomorrow's temperatures will range from the 60s over the Lakes region, the central plains and’

afternoon readings in the 80s. Weather-wilted residents from the Gulf states through the Ohio valley to New York and Connecticut can expect another 24 hours of sticky weathér with minimum temperatures in the 70s early tomorrow. and rising into the £0s during the day.

{BIRTHS

Twins At At Coleman—Herschell, Helen Pershing,

girls. Girls

At Coleman—Bozidar, Mamie Stoshitch: At Floyd, Vir-|

Virginia Bartlett;

Herbert, Virginia Heady

ginia Reed; Charles. Warren, Lessie Bakins

i and be incorporated in the general At Metheodist—John, Rose Von Spreckle8

budget ordinance.

STRAUSS SAYS:

en; Carl. Esther Leister: William, Dora

Webber; Emil, Margaret Cooper, Rob-

A © p

L.A. WAGNER ALL MGHTS RESERVED.

|

|

A;

HL A (i MY

reaten

vw

amen,

FOTOEAST

e

THE WEATHER FO TOLAST «+» ACME TELEPHOTO * of U.S. WEATHER BUREAU. DEPT. of COMMERCE FORECAST: PERIOD ENDING 730AM ES

2047

/

THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES — ~~.

Here For Lowe

pk

*

r

Buiding Starts | On Branch Bank |

“East Side to Get New

Community Center

Constryction ‘was begun today on the third of four branches planned | by the Indiana National -bank. t The new structure, which will be! located at Oakland ave and E. New| York st. was designed by D. Al

LEGEND

o 5

Scattered thundershowers will develop in partly cloudy to cloudy skies from Florida to the Ohio valley and southern New York, over the southern Rockies and the northwest. (Affected areas on the FOTOCAST picture where these storms will occur.) A tropical storm was centered 10 to 15 miles west southwest of Houston, Tex. at 1:15 a. m. (Indianapolis time) today. Winds of 75 miles per hour west and northe west of Houston are expected to subside as the “tropical twister” dies out. Fotocast fans and weather-wise speculators will notice the northerly winds flowing around the

ah SROWNSVILLE

| high pressure cell will bring fair

and somewhat cooler weather, but no rain for the drought area in the corn belt and the central plains. Since high and low pressure cells, fronts and affected areas or storms move eastward the chances for rain in this central section of the U. 8. is very

r slight before mid-week or later.

ert, Mildred Stross, and ‘John, Icenogle. St. Francis—Claude, Nora Francis, Wilma Fairbanks; Von, Wagner, Jasper, Theima Lorry; Cha

John, Mary Tramell, At St. Vineent's—Gilbert, Charles, Una Hudson. Harold, Thomas: John, Bthel Wise Mary Hawkins, and Leon,

,Betty Gordon

TRADITION WITH A TOUCH OF TOMORROW!

SAULTLESS LADY NO BELT PAJAMAS—

arg Sonsistently 8 wonderhd buy! They are of striped cotton, designed to be wom either "in" or “out,” Short sleeves and a sweetheart neckline Teminize their erisp tailoring. An excellent choice for five Coed—who loves to go "Joe."*

¢ Casual — “smooth” — Bubduedly feminine,

Blue, green or wine—with white stripes. 5.00.

L STRAUSS & CO. INC. BH SPECIALTY, SHOP 1§-ON THE THIRD FLOOR

&

{ 12:

Catron; Cleora rles, Leota King, and Dale, Winifred Palmer. |At

City—Henry, Dorothy Byers: Willlam, | Mary Stevhens; Jesse, Ellen Eads, and |

Edna Gilbert, Josephine

SCATTERED SHOWERS. AIR FLOW RAIN

2 DRIZILE

THUNDER STORM

Lk ULL

Tomorrow's minimum tempera-

“*“|The newest branch will be known |

|Bohlen & Son, architects, and will SREIERFREEES be constructed by William P. Jun- SSSSSCE

[claus Co, | - Uy First Branch in Operation | THIRD OF FOUR —Constiuction was started today on the Indiana Nationph f: Sect of Mit how hoviciilbiognd bank s East New York st. branch to be located at Qakland ave. and E. New York 'W. Washington st. and Harris ave.| St. This is the architects’ drawing of how =the new branch, third in a program The first in the string, the Maple calling for four altogether, will look when. it is -completed. |Road branch at 38th st. and Wash- |, 00 00 tine service ( ne I 1 lington blvd, is already in operation. | p ¢ banking services of the In- n announcing start of construc- pose to contribute to each e o> diana National and to provide a tion on the third branch, President nity a business structure of archi. as the East New York st. branch. rallying point for community busi- Russell I. White of the Indiana tectural beauty and distinction. The last of the four'is scheduled to ness and civic activities, Each National bank said: Bach of our branches will have bego somewhere on the South side, branch building will contain a spa-| “Not only do we plan to supply hind it all of the Indiana National bank officials said. clous air conditioned civic meet- complete banking services in each of bank's assets and resources, finanThe branches are designed both to ing room. our branches, but it is also our pur-icial strength and personal services.”

a ay

\

ture forecasts include Milwaukee, |

58; Chicago, 62; 69; Philadelphia and Kansas City,

Memphis and St. Louis, 74.

. Official Weather UNITED STATES Aug. 10, 1947 Sunrise . 3:06 | Sunset i Precipitation 24 hrs. ending 7:30 a. m, Total precipitation since Jan. 1 . Deficiency since Jan 1

“The following table shows (he tempera-

ture yesterday in other cities

Atlanta Boston Chicagn . Cincinnati ..... Cleveland .. Denver Sebaatuanes Evansville .......... Pi. Wayne | Ft. Worth ae Indianapolis (city) {Kansas City dann |Los Angeles Miami Minneapolis-8t |New Orleans {New York ' Oklahoma City |Qma aR {Pittsburgh |San Antonio {San Francisco |S. Lows «....... Washington, D. C. ..

DeSantels. At Home—S8iephan, Fletcher ave,

Wanda Burdos,

Boys At Coleman--Arthur, Ruby McQueen. Methodist — Basil, Jeanne

Boyle. Lercy, Nellie Langdon: Joan Mumaw Francis—Everett, Jane Drury, Robert,

Robert, AL St, Paul. Wukasch: and Wendell, Genevieve Herald. At City—Frank, Roberta Reed At St, Vincent's—Robert,

Scott; Carl, Vivian Sanford; Hazel Speer, and George, Ann Plump At Home—Shirley, Ella Cannon, Ethel st.

DEATHS

John 8. Thomas, 85, » bralhemorrhage. Leona A. Beard, arteriorsclerosis Harriet Carter, 77, at City, arteriosc rosi t coronary occlusion. George Thoms, B84, cardio vascular renal Enos Elliott, 75, at Methodist, occlusion.

william Hackemeyer, 82, at~3403 Raiston Kenwood , Sowers, 54, at 1704 N. Pennsyl-! at Long, gloBert Clarence Wood, 60, at Medical Center,

coronary occlusion Margaret C. Shea, 81, arteriosclerosis,

at 3601

pneumonia . Underwood, 75, merulonephritis,

carcinoma

Oda Prancis Baker, 56, at Methodist, ear- |

'Racketeers Move In

—Gamblers and racketeers

Cleveland, 65; | Detroit, 66; Boston and Atlanta, |

WEATHER BUREAU 943

00 27.14 23

ie

Kersey: | Ralph, Katherine Arnold; Daniel, Grace Tate; Marvin, Vivian Lowell; John, Jane| Joseph Rebeca Bums; Robert, eBtty Phillips, and Viola Walker Patricia Joseph, Mildred Buchanan,

Louise Hughes, Mark, Katherine Boor. Roberti, Georgia Freelen,

2726

Floyd Burt, 64, at City, glomerulonephritis. | t 1706 Miller, cere-

65, at 1604 8. Meridien, E, George Doraff, 5, at 741 N, Tremont,

at 402 E. 37th,

coronary

cinoma. Darlene Penny McDonald, 9, at Riley, sarcoms.

WASHINGTON, Aug. 25 (U. P.).. : are .

STR. TY STRAUSS 1R ADITION WITH A TOUCH: OF TOMORROW

Washington, 737 New York,

A

ANNOUNCEMENT

Including the Purdue-Marott | Agriculture Center of This City

PRESENTS

"A DISPLAY OF IMMEDIATE PUBLIC INTEREST AND OF SPECIAL CONCERN TO THOSE WHOSE COLLEGE CAREERS ARE POINTED TO THE SCIENCES AND THE SOIL.

le- | |

{descending in droves on the sunny land of California and already

some are “entrenched with some state authorities” and threaten ea “ploody gang war,” Senator Sheri-

dan Downey (D. Cal.) charged to--

ENGINEERING ELECTRONICS » 'CHEMURGY

day.

STRAUSS SAYS:

STUDENTS! - FAMOUS DAVID COPPERFIELD SLACKS

Full Cut—Tailored with a knowledged hand and eye— Fine, Famous thick-set Hockmeyer Corduroy— In Castor, Cream, Brawn, Teal, Navy. 25 to 32 waist

650... ..

"FOURTH FLOOR

| THE MANS STORE

AGRICULTURE eo JET PROPULSION ° AERONAUTICS

wu

A DRAMATIC WINDOW EXHIBIT ARRANGED # THROUGH THE CO-OPERATION OF PURDUE UNIVERSITY TO GIVE TO THE CITIZENS OF INDIANAPOLIS AND INDIANA — A VIEW OF THE MARCH OF SCIENCE

WITH A

PREVIEW OF TOMORROW

Loussaco. oc. Es

i