Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 11 June 1948 — Page 12
Fences hte
Al. TT re ERE
SS ES TA
ormer Professor
_ Dr. Cadbury to Speak. At College Sunday
fessor and an
® Dr. or at
fan of American Friends ‘ rvice Committee, will hig at e baccalaureate service a rn Sunday. He was a member of the Earlham faculty in 1915 and 1916. Edwin Way Teale, author and naturalist, who was graduated from Earlham in 1022, will speak a commencement exercises at 10 . m. Monday. ! T Seven Hoosier students ‘were ‘among: the sixteen honor graduates announced by the college. Heading the list was Mrs, Mary Jane Saeger, Hagerstown, Other Indiana students were Florence Wiesehahn, Richmond; Shirley
3 a RICHMOND, Tune 1A tors
|
Crabb, Richmond; Ted Kalsbeek,
mond; Lindley Clark, Muncie, and| John Beasley, Richmond.
Memorial Plaque
be placed on the new heating
campus. : : Bomar Cramer, Indianapolis | sess. Nani, will present a recital at 8.p. m. today in observance of the college Second Century Development Program. Tomorrow will be Alumni Day, with a luncheon and business meeting scheduled at 1 p. m. The senior class will present Jeorge Kelley's. play “Torch-Bearers’” at © Pr Holesovsky, a ber of the Earlham tcutty, will nt a violin rectial at 8 p. m day.
Scientech Club + to Meet
| Maurice Coburn will speak on “Concrete” at the Mon-
' Fh v a Ew
Sida
dis THE
FRR
TY
"Liberty; Helen Nordsieck, Rich-|
| Today a memorial plague hon-| oring J. Marmaduke Gluys, long-! time engineer at the college, will}
plant, now in construction on the!
in Goddard Auditorium...
«products for home use.
._ day noon in the Hotsl Antlers of “the Scientech Club (Inc.) of Indi-| They are Robert M. Bruns, mas-
}
TENSE: MOMENT—Avalfig. the Harton 5 Soa 3 are five Tivos carriers ‘who JEtarday — with their city-wide championship race at Riverside Park Roller Rink. . The miniature racers, powered by
Yiny Jet-Job “racers in a bi
Eth 44th St.; Orbrey. Leveret
‘Red Cross to Give > Food Freezing Course
A free course in home freezing will be offered by the Red Cross nutrition service in the anditorium of the Indianapolis Power Light Co. from 2 p. m. until 3 pom. Tuesday through Thursday. ‘Domonstrat
>
Ny
wit | Preparation and freezing of fruits, vegetables, méats and . bakery
4 Hoosiers. Get Degrees Four Indianapolis resiaents were among the 2000 graduating seniors who received their diplo‘mas today at Ohio University.
ter of and Jo Anne Grisso, Robert D. Ragsdale and Barbara L. Turley, all bachelor of science
i
ners of a Times City Circulation Department contest ran ther cars in the race. | C02 cartridges, have been clocked on smooth floors at from 92 to 113 miles per hour. | are (left to right) Ricitdo Mendez, 12, 428 N. Pine St.; John Harlan, 13, 1834 N. Livingston Ave. Billy Lyons, 9, 1620 | and Edward Alvin Melich, 10, R. R. 14, Box 389 Indianapolis.
&'
ions--will-in elude...
hl2 12, 38 W. Raymond St.
since he had seen a doctor.
afford 't he was th
two children, & man But this time Tom doctor+-he went to 22. X-rayed thoroughly, his were aximined and cleaned. eyes“ were tested.
have been given at the Mayo 'Clinie or Johns Hopkins, : No Cost to Tom It didn't cost him a penny, because Tom is one of more than 8000 men apd women—mostly members of the ‘Retail, are sale and Department Store Wi ers (C10), who belong to the La- — Health Institute.
$295 DELIVERS
® OSCILLATING “or STATIONARY “® ON AN OFF SWITCH © HHO ILAE ~«® PRECISION WORKMANSHIP RUST, ACID RESISTING FINS -
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TA TT I TT et
or shop, These handsome, modern are od in design to insure -outsianding petlormance...they're keep a trem ‘amount ol air in constant circulation
‘tute either 3% or 5 per cent of
Fifty-eight St. Louis stores, in contracts with the union, to pay to the Health Insti-
their payrolls. The smaller figure covers only the worker himself. The larger ‘one, befng put in new contracts, covers the whole family. __For this. the worker and his; family get such services as Tom Bastian needed. They get Blue Cross hospital insurance benfits, paid tution. of this ers’ con-
For $2-<for the first Yisit—and st thereafter, they get any sort
income taxes.
Undersecretary of the Treasury A. L. M. Wiggins told the House Appropriations Committee | in an offhand. guess that the bureau could have added another billion to that two billion if jt had had a big enough staff, : Will Add 1600 Workers So congressional committeemen have agreed to put back $5 wil.
last year.— This will add around 1600 persons io the enforcement staff of 20,000. Enforcement will :
The bureau's total appropriation is $100 million more than that. In adding the five million for) enforcement Congress has told the Treasury to make a report next year on what the additional! staff has been able to do. This| means that if collections are big! enough, the Revenue Bureau might be given still more employees next year, The two -billion picked up by| examining returns closely and) putting in claims for more tax! is not all the result of catching| chiselers. That accounts for part) of it, of course. But the bureau's examiners follow the old legal rule that a taxpayer is innocent of fraud until he’s proved guilty.
Permits Closer Look
Actually, out of 55 million re-| turns filed, only 3 per cent are ‘really closely examined. They’ re!
He got everything. he wowldls
On $42.50 a weekhln a big city like 8t, Louis, with a wife and
many visits to the doctor, sitate. He not’ only went to one
of curative treatment they require.
Have Use of X-Ray ' At the Institute they can be back and forth among specialists in internal medicine, surgery, women's diseases, urology, stomach diseases, eye, ear, nose and throat, neurology, allergies, children’s diseases. have the use of X-ray
THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
EA 5 Ge a TB AE er amis pr I a
Predicts Diesels On All Roads
Historical Bureau director here,
LJ
of the Year. The volume, published by Encyclopaedia Britan-
\ “FRIDAY, <
Howard H. Peckham, Indiana|
has contributed an article on Indiana to the 1048 Britannica Book!
Don’t Apologize
ms a
EE
—USE RIZE
- Soience Service FRENCH LICK, Ind. June 1 _|==Diesel locomotives within a decade or less will haul most of the American railroad trains, the Soclety of Automotive Engineers was told here today by President J, W. Barriger, of the Chicago,
: “|return trip with ‘only routine serv-
, Jocomotives in repairs to them,
Rail Firm Head Talks To Auto Engineers
Indianapolis & Louisville Rallway
Diesels already surpass steam locomotives in virtually all vespects, he sald, and rapid future progress in design and development will establish the diesel as definitely superior. ~ Runs With Ease
While the diesel locomotive is the most expensive motive power unit, it can make even transcontinental runs with “ease and dependablility, and be ready for the}
icing. Every four years, he stated, the
railroads spend the equivalent of their original investment in steam
The gross annual expenses of!
Twenty-five district win-
The carriers shown here
Labor Institute at St. Louis Provides Health Treatments at Wholesale Cost
8000 Men, Women Belong to Organization; 100 Patients Con Be Handled Daily by- Staff
resp A BErvie ST. LOUIS, June 1i-Tom | Bastian didn't feel well. He wasn tl really sick, but obviously: sorhething was wrong. It was four years
willing to pay 312 per cent of his own salary for membership.
Skeptical at First
were skeptical and hard to pers suade. Now Dr. Elmer F. Rich« man, director, finds them very co« operative. : They have discovered, he says, that the Institute is of value in guiding the placement of workers, reducing absenteeism, and in¢reasing worker productivity by preventing sickness and eliminating worry about himself and his family. The Institute started in 1945
i BLOOMINGTON,
nica, is an annual summary of| the preceding year's events, i
Face-Tailored Shave!
Finds your scientific
* shaving angle. Tailors a i «smooth shave to : your individual facial Seidl : curves. Leaves you won. sheth of Bl dering how whiskers can ya : he Wings whiner
DEPENDABLE DRUG STORES
{owning and operating stegm loco{motives represent about "75 per {cent of the original cost of these machines; ~The low cost of diesel maintenance is greatly in their favor, he indicated.
Link Observatory Presented to IU
Times State Service June 11-— Presentation of the Goethe Link Observatory to Indiana Univer-
Indianapolis, was announced to-| day by the university board of! trustees. |
Dr, and Mrs. Link also made a bequest of additional property| in Indiana to the university through the Goethe and Helen Link Foundation for, Sclentific| Research. The income will be: used to maintain the observatory. | The observatory, completed in| 1939 and situated near Brooklyn, Ind., was built by Dr. Link. The Indiana University astronomy department has worked closely with the Link Observatory since Xa
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Formerly Selling for as Much as $5.00. A
LADIES! 1
SEE OUR
SUMMER SPECIALS
EARLY-IN-THE-SEASON BARGAINS WHICH
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In White * Brown and White ® Colors Sandals ® Flatties ®
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It is open also to anybody ‘else, | in or out of the union, who mo 1s Training “Sections
Congress Risking $5 Million Or Chance to Collect Billion
‘Heeds Revenue Bureau's Plea for More Emloyees to Check Income Tax Returns
Times Special * WASHINGTON, June {11—Congress is risking $3 million to find out if the Internal Revenue Bureau can collect $1 billion more in
Despite reduction of its staff by nearly 6000 persons in an economy drive last year, the bureau reported it collected nearly 482 billion over what taxpayers, individuals and corporations, I had reported in their returns, m
len of the $20 million lopped. oft]
copt around $75 “million all told}
all checked, but most of the little]
Increasing the enforcement staff permits a closer look at moré returns. | Of the 20,000 persons in the| enforcement division, only about) 1000 are actual sleuths who run down suspicions of fraud. The) rest are accountants, lawyers and! eagle-eyed computers.
LL b Th ands A OOPund Tne Chie y x Dally Non. Bua
CAMPERS’ SUPPLIES Tents, Cots, Rubber
ing Bags, Sun Glasses. Army Surplus Headquarters | 225 8. ILLINOIS
ones are only given a once-over. | 2
Boats, Comforters, Sleep- |
(with 1500 “patient” members and
facilities, of dentists and a dental 44x ysclans. Today there are 36 clinic; of a fulfy equipped labora- eid i five dentists, plus enough tory—plus registered nurses and! nurses, a social worker. | A pharmacy attached to the In- handle more than 100 patients a stitute sells drugs, prescribed by day. the Institute's doctors for about| Most of the doctors have their half what most drug stores charge. lo Probably 7000 out of the ‘hore than 8000 beneficiaries of this|the patients. plan belong to the retail workers' union, which conceived the idea, professor of Otolaryngology at sold it to employers and has got - School; ten it included in many contracts./the’ Institute's chief of staff, says| The system is open, however, that “our doctors are well paid to members of any other union for their work.” that may get its employers to contribute.
laboratory technicians, secretaries and other personnel to
own practices, but keep office hours
[Three ‘fa. Teach Butler
Three instruc tions of Butler
program have been appointed. . The sections,
#chool, will:
Instructors Granger, training, Indianapolis Pubii Schools
Are: Mrs.
and cipal of Public
MARILYN'S SC SV] STORAGE
CH TTT Approved Method of GAS FUMIGATION AND STERILIZATION
3 R413 ]e
29 E. OHIO AR
OPEN LETTER TO THE AMERICAN PUBLIC
243 Members of both Houses of Congress appeared at public hearings in support of legislation to provide adeuate salaries for. Postal Employees. e vast majority of Senators and members of the House of Representatives favor these long-overdue pay adjustments,
The leaders in Congress have the responsibility of allowing the majority of Congress to express their collective views on this subject. This legislation wil pass ifit is permitted to come to a vote!
We are certain that the American people feel the legislation to grant a reasonable pay boost to Postal Employees should be at the top of any ‘must’ list of legislation to be enacted in the closing days of the 80th Con"gress. This is the hour of decision! - We urge the American people to again “inform their Senators Congressmen that'they want the Government to A rovide a decent standard of living for ostal Workers.
© <INDIANAPOLIS LOCAL No. 130 .
NATIONAL FEDERATION OF pos OFFE: CLERKS i
Si Le.
regular at the Institute adapted to the off-work hours of
Dr. Arthur M. Alden, associate
rs to teach sec-| niversity’'s summer elementary teacher training
a part «of * the College of Education summer ‘meet Monday through Saturday each week during the
‘Grace director of in-service
+ Miss Flora Drake, former principal of Public School 21, Miss Florence Hamill, prinSchool 22.
Public lectures, inaugurated oy] Dr. Link's request, will be con-'
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Special Purchase Enables Us Wedgies ®
tinued.
Purdue Expects 4500 To Enroll for Summer |
Times State Service i LAFAYETTE, June 11.—Ap‘proximately 4500 persons were |expected to enroll in Purdue Uni-| versity for the summer session Spening June 18. This figure will than last year. % on for new students will be held Monday and Tuesday. Classes will end Aug. 14.
| 1 i i
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