Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 2 December 1949 — Page 23

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“FRIDAY, DEC. 2,189

INDIANA'S LARGEST CLEANERS

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Hrumen Has. Trouble.

By PAUL R. LEACH,

and partnerships, reported net incomes under $10,000. More than 93 per cent said they netted less than $5000, according to the Internal Revenue Bureau. And there were many millions who did not make enough, after

bother about filing a return. To these 98 per centers a $15,000 or $20,000 salary looks pretty big. Even after taxes a $20,000 family man has somewhere around §$16,000 left. Why do officials frequently say they can’t get along on their pay and have to leaye for private business to recoup their fortunes? { Worth More Money The answer is that they made more in private business or pro- | fession before they were persuaded to come into government, and want to get back to that kind

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|Getting Top-Flight Men| For Federal ;

"Many Turn Down Bureau Jobs Because They Can Make Much More Privately

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Mark Anniversary

Times Special Writer

WASHINGTON , Nov. 30--The average American can't get). worked up over government officials who moan blue about the smallness of their paychecks, but it's serious business for President Tru {man when he's trying to fill top jobs. ” : = More than 98 per cefit of the American people who filed income tax returns for 1947, and that includes individually owned business

“Clark Clifford, special counsel to the President, is expected to re-

sign next January to go into priv-|

ate law practice here. Mr, Clifford's friénds say he made more than the $20,000° he gets now when he was a St. Louis lawyer. As one who knows how govern. ment works from the inside he probably could. do much better when his shingle is up here. Washington has many lawyers who were once members of Congress or who worked up to bureau tops In government, Some of them are in the big money, many are just scraping along. A change in political administration can change their prosperity radically. Wants $50,000 Man The President is trying to find right now a $50,000 man to take the $17,500 Atomic Energy Commission chairmanship which Da-

of dough, or they have acquired 2 “know how” or “know who” in government that is worth real ‘money in private life. If the President appoints politi. ical hacks’to important adminis-| {trative posts paying more than] they ever could earn elsewhere,| Congress and the editorial] | writers yell loudly. Yet Mr. Tru-| Iman. repeatedly has said it is very| difficult to get high powered men to take the important posts because of the financial sacrifice. Average government employees!

counterparts in business-—minor executives, clerks, typists, and the like. But top men in business and industry, the kind Mr. Truman says he has difficulty getting, draw bigger incomes than men doing comparable federal work.

vid E. Lilienthal is leaving. He

tives from business or industry to fill important jobs which have been vacant for some time. Mr. Truman tried to nominate his old friend, former governor Mon Wallgren, for the $17,500 post of chairman of the National ecurity Resources Board, which is the nesting place for most of the special wartime agencies, Mr, Wallgren had to settle for a $15,000 place on the Federal Power Commission. The Senate

are slightly better paid than their|diq not think him qualified for the

NSRB place. Until Friday chairmanship of the Munitions . Board had been vacant for four months, This is the Defense Department agency which does all procurement planning for war. Mr. Truman tried

Allen WedDec.

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1874. Open house will be held at the Allen home from 2 to § pm. on Dec. 11.

to appoint Carl A. Ilgenfritzs, vice president of the United States Steel Corp. Mr. ligenfritz was willing to take the $15,000 job for a while if he could stay on steel's payroll at’ $70,000. The Senate ‘would not permit that. N Last Friday the President pointed Chicagoan Hubert: Howard to the plage. Mr. Howard is a wealthy manufacturer and mineral developer, who said he could afford the place and thinks he owes his country a service. [Comm dash, But /nfinnogie Te

ont ———————

61-Day ‘Steel Strike

(wants even higher rated execu-| Ended at Kokomo

| * KOKOMO, "nd., Dec. 2 (UP)— {The Continental Steel Corp. today {rushed plans to get the plant, idied by a 61-day strike, back into full production by the week's end. Some 2000 members of the CIO United Steelworkers accepted a compromise pension-insurance plan Jast night to end the long walkout, which began as a part of the nation-wide CIO-USW pension strike on Oct. 1.

ENVOY STUART GAINS WASHINGTON, Dec, 2 (UP) Dr, J. Leighton Stuart, U, 8. ambassador to China, who suffered a brain hemorrhage yesterday, was reported in an “improved condition” today at the Bethesda, Md., Naval Hospital.

| BERLIN

Force Refugees to Return to Soviet By PAVID M. NICHOL Forelén Correspondent + Dec, 3 — Volga Ger{mans who fled the Soviet Union with the retreating (Jerman armies now are being “repatriateéd” forcibly. - They originally were members of a century-old community which - thrived along the middle reaches of the Volga River. Most jof them were uprooted forefbly and shipped to Siberia by Soviet 'authorities when e German armies headed for the area early in 1942. 2 Those now In Germany were stragglers who returned here with’ the German forces, The newly reported activity (seems to center about Leipzig. As! presumptive Soviet citizens they are being “urged” to go back, If they refuse they are transported forcibly, these reports say One group of 57 fled as Individuals and reached sanctuary in western Berlin. They since have been flown to western Germany, where they will be resettled near Lake Constance in th French-occupied zone.

onrring Bhieass Bally News "Toe, Time

Police Halt Dice Game ‘Go’ for 26

“We got the word to ‘go,'"” a crap-game operator told Palice Lt. Noel Jones last night at the Jas Social Club, Indiana

‘Letprig ||

EVER POPULAR

ve." “0. K,, let's go then, all of you,” Lt. Jones answered, Twenty-six men, slated for city vagrancy were to -be

noon. . Police rounded up the “customers spectators” In the Sib while making a routine

Want to sell your home? Call your broker and tell him to vertise it in the big ESTATE SECTION of

in Municipal Court 4 this a .

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“TIPPER SLIPPER”

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’ used to it, the baby gets so it doesn’t wake up « plaint will crop up. : rr at 2 A.M. anymore. . Gas Utility employees are honestly working Si Interestingly enough, you think about every- toward the utopian goal of “no service calls:

thing else at 2 A.M. if you think at all—except about the small blue gas flame that springs to life at the touch of your fingers, Yet, the gas

flame is there, night a

: week-days and Holidays. : That kind of 24-hour service is no accident. For gas service, to be good at all, must be continuous service, all-the-time service, around:

the-clock service. Gas

. trying to provide you this kind of service, trying to do service job that would make it. unnecessary for you everto call, Yet they know;

-

DID YOU EVER WARM A BABY'S BOTTLE AT TWO IN THE MORNING ? hr a

®It's tough. The first six weeks are the hard-

st about the time you're

nd day, rain or shine,

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Utility employees are

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‘that among 120,000 customers, scattered over ~400 square miles, an occasional service com.

at all”; and take pride in the fact that thous sands of customers go- year in and year out without any trouble at all. There is a lot-of satisfaction in it for you—and us—when that gas flame springs to life at two in the morning to wirm the baby's bottle.

CITIZENS (f GAS |!

AND COKE UTILITY

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