Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 7 August 1949 — Page 3
y A ¥ Pt ; bi Ap a he Se ee EE pon 1 Paveall Rancte Malka lln = Palin . Hoover to Observe. His 75th Birt yo isnty 3 In Palo Alto Amid World's Acc on op Red Cross to 4 Networks to Carry 30st President Hailed . Important Speech For Humanitarianism = Sun By LUCIEN CARR work Js coalrian of President he SA [EHRNIY NIrene Ti Pr : Ly : Ask Wage Rises, NEW YORK. AGS. 6—The ’ 2 ried shone brightly into the autumn of a whirl - wind 53-day airplane New Emplo ees Nation-Wide Plog Herbert Clark Hoover's life today. journey conferring with officials or dug out y ~ Made fo Meet | . As the world prepared to cele- in 22 famine-stricken countries on after & . « A FOURTH aun L) wage in- |’ ~ibrate his 75th birthday -anniver- three continents, Ernest Reuter, y. creases . 3 sary next Wednesday, it was mayor of Western Berlin, sent 4 e that left {oe eS appears the mak- t 8 re than : ity Hall en the 1950 learned that Mr, Hoover, the only cable. of congratulations to 0 homeless : municipal budget submitted to! |The American Red Cross is be- living ex-President of the United Hoover saying: ; City Council last week by Mayor ing “hard pressed” to find enough States, recently had been offered “Phere are thousands and tholiit Ecuador Feeney and City Controller- Phil- nurses for Indiana and other but turned down the honor of sands of children who have been lp Bayt. ; ; serving as New York State's in- saved from starvation and iliness Ake struck This, the states with pollp epidemics, . ior Senator. . by the great humanitarian work - i aa los a. rot addition of 1437 Officials issued a nation-wide \n .. piper ¥ Wagner (D. N. you initiated and which will be the: be= . by the current DuAget wan n= jappeal for volunteer nurses yes-\y , resigned fromthe Senate be- remembered .as. an. act of unique Jeg. b crease the over-all municipal pay. terday. They said the Red Cross|cause of illness, Gov. Thomas. BE. py } oboirVanew BT ng--city of . «roll by $672,028.15 -— more than has a backlog of about 100 un- Howe y Offered the seat > Frei Hy oe i vo ul scores. ants, was two-thirds of the total budget in- {Allied requests for ‘nurses. SOVSF. Who! MIBIAE" of German cities and towns. dead there crease of $962,886 requested next |. And. additional. requests _ are, JeTice in New York City's Waldor BN «Aldfrom - the--Russiaz... sphers .. with 4000 year. ° - jcoming into headquarters dally, a ARNSES: ne NE" Kig H Hee ? praises and thanks have come The proposed budget would in- they sald. should be amended to provide all erbert Hoover also. From Finland the Finland Razed crease the payroll alone from $9.- In Indiana, Red Cross officials ; Relief Organization sent a mesARE: i of re former Presidents with a the present Democtatic-ad-, E BL bomen iter towns 85441410 In the current hudget are faced with the problem of T&-| ., "vy “Hoover refused Gov. ministration as well. sage of thanks on behalf of the { out, while to $10,256,442.25, a 7 per cent cruiting polio nurses in an al- Dewey's offer. In his Stanford address, en- thousands of Finns Mr. Hoover sustained Jump. The payroll raise accounts most barren area. Virtually all titled “Think of the Next-Genetq- Delped after the first and second her, an ad for most of the 16-cent hike in of the available nurses have vol-| ~The appointment tendered by! tion," he is expected. to’ answer WOFld wars, 000 injured the tax rate Mr. Bayt and the unteered-for duty. Gov. Dewey was good only unti Pe In Londor, Lord Cecil, honor- : @ special election to be held in!critics of the government reor- |. of Ambato. Mayor have proposed. 25 Recruited New York next November. -Mr. ganization program which he was acy life president of the United 7 estimated = =» = Hogver a ted" to friends he commissioned to make by Presi: Nations Association, Assistant may reach ANALYSIS of the budget pro- | The Indianapolis chapter al- Hoo ndicate y Secretary of State for Foreign ND. Te shows that wage ready has recruited 52 nurses lo- might have taken the job if it had dent Truman. The speech, Sched-| "hs" 1018 Nobel Prize winieken | the are spotty. Father Than General _ically...for_.polio...work..in_Riley.ibeen for a longer term. John uled for 8 p.m. (Indianapolis : tod-on-3lesFOnvesige rs joods of the potty. < He ad {Long and Methodist, and the Na- Foster Dulles was named to alll time) will be broadcast across the a Fm ng ol wal og by tne - . gent ey hp Suggests [tional Red Cross has sent in 22|the Senate vacancy. “nation by the four major net- Ih ‘Mr. Hoover bec “well 4 gs ua ig Hey bi {from eastern cities. Next Wednesday, Mr. Hoover works. ans here in Europe for his t of Ecua- ity do not rellect any policy by — Should the number of cases in|will return to the campus of his| Mr. Hoover is now on a fish- 5 a level the mayor and controller, al- | : «. Splendid work in Belgian relief - e sea level, thouzr th Metal roved {local hospitals increase at the alma mater, Leland Stanford Uni-/ing trip—one of his favorite pas after the First’ World War. He surrounded Shaug ese officials arp same rate as in the wast ‘=ivepgity near his -home in Palo times—in Southern California. He showed great and disinterested getable ore em. s {weeks, the need for polio nurses Alto, Cal, where he will ddiver will return to Palo Alto Tuesday © L = = =" 0 mitigate the - The exception to this is a 5- ’ will reach an “unprecedenceu a birthday speech “of major na- to deliver his speech in the shadow horrors of war, Our deep respect so. in. the cent hourly- fagreass for all labor- > Laborers . . their wages arg die to rise Sc an hour, ‘peak, Red Cross sources said. {fional importance,” after an anni- of the 285-foot tower § h tod in. for Bim femzina Be ey pest populated ers paid at an ourly rate. ? 3 ie Many Volunteer... |versary party in the Hoover Li-over the | library he dedicate in; Lo ata SE ropa IY BOTH, poe andr deg | Au available. Marion County | Tory “on War. Revolution and/ THT Fie promote beste a from or: ations and good wishes ed payroll rise shows A o Peace. of 12 § expected to fi ere clogged $255,799.60 of it is budgeted for joicers above the rank of police nurses . not regularly employed —But-as his friends and neigh: bowl to capacity. 1: po, Mail By Je Tm Ie som umns. They the 143 new jobs which have been P y {have already volunteered for po-| bors and many prominent officials| In West Branch, Ia., where Mr.| . ise the efty hail/in the budget. They range in the. Hoover was: born the second of Ing in by the ton. Library off ing Where. - Seated 10 TAM ON police ‘départment from $100 an- Ilo duty. The ability of the Na: gather to do him honor on the Hc ary o | clals have a bin where the mail fell by the . working force from 4226 to 4369. 3 " {Stanford campus, other admirers three children in 1874, the annua ] Sti ee ROE I 84 16:228 55s DUALLY. for sergeants to $175 for {tional Red Cross to supply ad AaB -chil--HoOYAr Birthday -celebration. will Ba received. They report they = ‘lieutenants and $225 for captains {from -other- “1.” {irom presidents hood: a impiler. but less heart- .4vé to clean it out five or six re jammed. In salary increases for existing {minishing also’ bécause of wide- dren, from West Branch, la. his Pe far simpler but no = of epidem= jobs. - There is one exception. It|and inspectors. t et an- | spread oS elsewhere, birthplace, to Helsinki, Finland, felt. An informal picnic will be times a Jay. 4. b In the Fire Department; net an ponsored by the Hoover Birth-| Mr. Hoove irthday party -as-fast as is a $1200 imcrease in the salary, Increases requested are $225 {Another cause of the nurse/will' participate in ceremonies {= n Botiery- WaT Branch tote will-be-heid-in-the-35 Library hes. Others of a non-existent executive secre." dispatchers. -and- assistant {shortage is in the increase in the marking. their respect. for the 31st PIACE where ‘the former President will tary to the Mayor from $3600 to hE ro for Hevtendnts a. : number of respirator cases and President: RY ame a Jan boo be presented with a donation for ' . . DY ¢ tiny cottage where he w 4 Sent of a4 LY eves the inc rease Dattalion’ chiefs and $375 for the letigtn 6f time patients are Still Exerts Influence bors. the library. The size of the gift, dings were captains. Miner, engmeer, top-ranking Germans Send Thanks {although unannounced, is under- 3 y destroyed, will attract a competent person { Thus, it seems to the Red Cross, |
destroyed
to the job which he has determined in the second year of his administration to be vital, - - s 8 n THE MAYOR also proposes to create the position-of pers director at $6000 a year. For this job and the $4800 executive secretary openings, he has received | several hundred applications. The personnel directorship is a post recommended by a- citizens’ committee and was suggested several years ago by a survey of municipal personnel which cost the city $10,000. The survey has been lost, but those who recall reafling it say it recommended a ‘personnel director. Except for employees and executives whom the mayor himself] hired, personnel work at City Hall was handled up to a year ago by Harry Gasper, Eighth
The only major operating departments _in City Hall not showing substantial wage increase requests are Engineering and Parks. In the engineering department, Myron G. Johnson; the city engineer, has cut five fulltime positions: we eg BUT HE HAS Sr & number of part-time employees. This with the .5 cents per hour increase for wagé tates increases his projected 1950 payroll by $116,396.70. Street Commissioner Tony Malo has asked for a $300 annual increase in his salary of $5100, an additional 22 employees in-
a RA
(cluding three to keep the streets
{clean and the 5-cent hourly wage increase. These raise his payroll > $83,358.40. In the Sanitation Department, ‘requests for 25 more laborers, |
and administrative help totals
Charles Bacon,
Tony Maio, Street Commissioner.
Philip Bayt, City Controller.
City Building! The 143 new jobs in the 1950
budget is a net figure. Actually there are 158 new jobs created,
Commiagionel
Among those eliminated are i
focal nurses will have to double Dusiness executive, world traveler, * 'up. Employers ars uiged to grant | Secretary of Commerce under two Germany millions of school-child-|additional days off to nurses for Presidents - [polio duty. Nurses themselves are 11929 to 1932, he still exerts con- man who ' [requested to volunteer on their siderable inflience not only in the enemies.’ gays off. *
Throughout the Allied zopes of
and chief executive ren will send their thanks to a
“truly loved his
In recognition of Mr. Hoover's
stood to be well over $100,000. Present at the celebration will be Mr. Hoover's two sons, Herbert Jr. and Allan. who will attend with their wives and five of Mr. Hoover's six-grandchildren.
!councils of the Republican Party
STRAUSS SAYS: TRADITION WITH A TOUCH OF TOMORROW!
CUSTOMFIELD
TWO OF “tHE biggest salary hut 15 other have been elimis : the 5-cent hourly rise and gen-| jobs. 3 Ward Democratic chairman, w 0! eral pay increases for: clerical creases are in the Board of pated. ESTMINSTE was on the payroll as the mayor 8 Health in addition to the $2000 w M ZR
> Po aaa
secretary at the time, raise asked by Dr. Kempf. A! Mr. Gasper filled most of the ®108.720.75. . ua $1000 annual raise is asked for !he Information clerk who “has Glengary Golden , ‘ A minor jobs in.the Hall from the| TRAFFIC ENGINEER Lewis 'Dr. John 8. Stanley, director of been sitting at a desk in the City Seotch Graif— patronage list of County Chair- Johnson is asking another traf- preventive medicine, and $1360 is Hall rotunda answering questions) Wing-tip Brogue— man Paul McDuff. Basis of em- signal repairman, two more asked for Jess Dunwoody, the and taking requests for city * — ‘ployment by a new personnel di-| i... - repair and atieet sign men|' city’s veteran chief chemist. "housing and one smoke inspector. | Double Leather sole rector has not been made public. "00 "okt time helpers to ——— a and rubber heel 8 8 boost the payroll by $9825. In E P le’ FP th A $ NO INCREASE in ‘the budget-'the Municipal Garage, the super-| rnie es o er, un 13.95 Sepcimins has vs rein rev moerrons 3 S70 s Pleased by Haw Ri is ha regue f to! les ‘a 120” aj } * but the largest number of new repair Ny i se y. a aiian I es — z en 34 ponies’ The _tist ot individual. LL - Times Staff Writer Returns to Indiana _ ° oh 7 -— ~ /increasés for municipal execu-| er a =; BUeTVIlon, al guards who|lIVES 16. led by. # request. from| To Tell of Reburial of Beloved Hoosier Controller Bayt himself for a By EDWIN C. HEINKE : would be paid $50 a month for | Assistant Managing Ed Th nine miopths wiil bring the school $1200 increase, raising his cur-| assis anaging iter, e Indianapolis Times guard strength from 75 to 129. rent $6000 annual salary to $7200.| DANA, Ind, Aug. 6—This was the end of my mission for They will relieve regular police] Dr. Gerald ‘Kempf, City Health Ernie Pyle’s father, Will’ Pyle, and his. aunt, Mrs. Mary Bayles. who have been required to watch Officer, is asking his salary be| I came back today from the pineapple fields of Aloha Oe intersections at schools this year. rdised from. $8000 to $10,000. He! jo the land of soybeans in Indiana to tell them the: story of General Hospital has asked for has made this requést annually rnie’'s reburial at Honolulu. 43 new employees, 'ncluding 30 for the last three years, but City Mr. Pyle and Aunt Mary couldn't 80 to the services held i additional general duty nurses at|/Council.has turned him down. July 19 because of their age and Se het salaries of $2520 and‘ $2640 a Purghasing Agent Albert, because the trip would have carried out perfectly and that year. It also has requested pay/Losche is asking an increase been too long for them. | the new military Punchbowl rises for nurses and technical from $5100 to $5340. Plan Com-| Mr. Pyle; who is 81, is prac- | National Cemetery was as beaupersonnel now employed. These mission Secretary Noble Hollis-| tically blind and Aunt Mary, | tiful a place as they would : proposals account for more than ter requests his $6000 annual sal-|- Who is- 83, -broke-fier. hip last | ever. find. = ; one-sixth of the overall payroll.ary be raised to $6300. Another, December but both are getting | + “I'm so. glad.” said Aunt : increase, = $300 salary increase is asked for| along in’ fine fashion, thanks to Mary, “Recause I know that if . | the help of their” friends and | Ernest could have had his wish, : ———— . peas | neighbors. he... would .have- chosen Hawaii | . 3 : . " | * = au | as his final resting place. 3 . | THEY ‘HAD asked me. to | “Ernest often told us in his represent them so I promised letters after visiting Honoiuiu > | when I came back I would come before thé war that someday he : | to Dana to tell them everything | might go there to live because : an 2s ww | that had happened. he loved the Hawaiian Islands. ¢ As we sat and talked in the | He didn't know it, but death Mah a . living room of Ernie's old home-"| brought him his wish.” . stead on the farm outside of | Dana, the. Rev. James Neil, “ : : . | pastor of the Dana Methodist 3 Children Hurt - { Church, joined us. ’ . | Of course, they had read the In Traffic Here * " - [“they ' wanted me to “tell: them fH Three “children “were. injured : we ' ) —— | again of the eternal sunshine Jase yéstrany. in-a series of traf-| . . . BR coon pines ntesiamn i» fn . NA . of the Hawaiian Islands. ‘the ne Jug aps - on Indianapolis] . i | music and the beautiful flowers. | yg i. ) i - ; : hs S o They were especially grateful Pa 1, year, bicyclist, James : . hf \ when" I mentioned the wreaths rel’. o Temple St. was 1 i ’ 00 admitted to St. Vincent's Hospital . } : } ‘ a I had placed .at Ernie's casket P } 0 ' r . + after his bicycle was struck by a g } : ’ ne was a wreath of orchids |car operated by LaPhearson Pitt- : 1 y : for Aunt -Mary -and- Mr. Pyle man, 19, of 422 Villa Ave., at the i : 2 “ and. the other was a wreath of intersection of Clayton and Dear- - : 4 - % jt Many Sttfes ™ Finishes roses from his friends on the [born Sts. y ’ 5 "00s From Scripps-Howard newspapers. His condition was reported fair. —WILL BE SEEN ON A LOT OF WELL DRESSED FEET THIS FALL! hy ‘" # = | ‘Three-year-old Larry Conley, of : : THE SPINET PIANO : inti thew sat She Evian | |Doans, was given first. ald by a - 5 " gr . and -m ary services ad been General -Hoapital - : ro YT —F ” TE x —— cretion ltr after Tp IRIE We've been selling CUSTOMFIELD Oxfords for a CUSTOMFIELD Oxfords have “soid” themseives PIPE WITH A GRAND TONE. Son's Birth Breaks Oriental and Market Sts. number of seasons now—somewhat. quietly—without lead ford in the middle price bracket y ; Police. said & car operated by too much publicity==without too much "push" —-a5. 4. jeacing _oxiord in Je miccle price prac = EMS TRADE IN YOUR OLD PIANO Mother's Vigil Tf “jaactwr auven- oy. Coons, 208 Hing wiccfines Gathers and ond shaemekivg “and this Fall they coms into their own on the lS Marasky, 4), of 1555 N. Grant | speak for themselves—And they have done right : sani ; ‘ Terms to Suit Your Income Dying Girl's Bed 8t., collided. my rap well, thank you! First Floor Mezianine! Customfield Oxfords range A ————————————r alata | Linda Balley, 4, of 826 Eastern : : . o [© - Rated the world’s finest spinet by leading authorities, this 0 Aug. 6 (UP)—A Ave. suffered a fractured collar) “= Each, eason-—increasing ‘numbers "of men—who in_price from 12.95 to 16.95. marvelous instrument has tonal perfection und. matchless grief-stricken young mother gave bone when she was struck by a : know shoe valye when they see if—have come construction, YET IS IN THE MEDIUM PRICE CLASS | birth oy a boy today, Breaking. her az. eteen 3; Helen Garsnett, up to Strauss for Customfields—in es are insistent You'll see them in greater numbers and in variety— = almost constant week-long vigil] of 625 N. Jefferson Ave. at | its us just fin@!—We like to i i i A See This Beautiful Instrument Tuesday by the bedside of a dying daugh-|the Intersection of Eastern Ave. ha hela Jat: h ow merit—without n busigess lasts—in_brogues, and sen brogues.— ter. {and St. Clair 8t. have oh nd a dvs ! tt WE and in high styles that have special appeal to “ Open Tuesday thru Satuday 9 A: M.-525P.M. | Mrs. Lovella Galentine, 29, wife| The child was treated and re-| . undue "hoopla and "sel wy Pee 3 we Sol 3 young men. And like we said—you'll see Customfield 4 of a dairy employee, and her six-| leased by a General Hospital am-| maker—it speaks well for The Man's Store's Selectivity lot of well dressed feet this Fall— * {id CLOSED MONDAY pound, five-ounce son was doing bulance physician. 5 ~and it speaks even better for the taste of our Oxfords on a lot of well dressed feet this Fa | well; sald attendants at -Omak ed fi eli Rju=s J You'll erijoy wiaring thm! ¢ Memorial Hospital. Fire Destr Bey flo Gren ; > ir Ld ind For a week, Mrs. Galentirfe and e Brey mm . / 7 : her husband, Eldon, have stayed On - Frenzel Farm ad S FOO] EAR Lot bt RST FLOOR MELANIE 3 close to the bedside’ of Lavonne,|' NOBLESVILLE, Aug 6 (UP) 2% year old daughter. The child Fire destroyed a large barn on has cancer of the brain. » a farm owned by Otto N. Frenzel, Nurses said that the mother re-| Indian polis banker, today. Dam- ! fused to ieavé thé. child's side age was esfimated at $30,000. even when doctors warned her The loss included. 35 tons of . that she should be in delivery. ibaled - hay, two tractors, 1000 [She finally was given a sedative, bushels of oats and farm ima : 'and taken to a delivery room plements. : . v . ; ¢ Temporary Lozation _ || where the boy was born today. Carmel firemen fought the| . ’ . Le ; . : Fi ¢ : idian—Opp. Mdhtal Hig hool i The couple has two other chil-|blaze. ~The farm is located in % j rN 542 S. Merid Pp--Manby igh 5 ] dren. southwestern Hamfiton County. | A ’ @ * : : r Ki . _ : * : » \ + ; a ’ i . nal - A
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