Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 9 February 1951 — Page 19
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i i De 5% a Inside Indianapolis By Ed Sovola Prey :
NO ONE remembers exactly when the L. S. A yres & Co. abpointmen 1 book was put into servce. ong ago: ro 't wa ice, 13% wag 50 Y probably don’t want ¢ Oh, for the benefit of the young couple in Irvington who just moved here last week from Lansing, Mich, the Ayres appointment book is something of a local institution. It's located at the front of the store, Washington St. entrance, The year 1925 is as nearras I can peg the date for inaygurating the vital local link in our sysiem 9 Sompunication, ‘ ne o er giggled (woman, naturall said *she thought the appointment ually), nd ranks on par with the Ayres clock from the-
standpoint of customer popularity, was in' the
store when she started to work there. After some cagey cross examination, she admitted she had been at Ayres for “about 20 years.” A fellow employee thought 25 years was a more accurate statement. From still another source, a high store official who has been at Ayres 22 years, I learned the appointment book was in use when he started. Let's leave it at 26 years. Oo About 15 years ago, all the pages had been used on a busy day. The service department received a call from an irate woman who demanded an immediate supply. She had a message for her husband, sir. A close check is kept today. Store officials from other cities when on inspection tour, are always shown the appointment book. Usually they are amazed at the convenience and popularity of the service, and it’s one of the
L S. AYRES & COMPANY
= : ; Derry we 43 pA © Lost, one husband . . . The Ayres appointment book is a vital means of communication for shoppers. ?
It Happened Last Night
By Earl Wilson
NEW YORK, Feb. 9—Milton Berle is still “The King.” This was the year they were going to knock the premier pie-thrower loose from his “Mr. Television” crown. The man who likes to dress up in long underar was going to be “unseated,” so to speak. But if the Nielsen ratings mean much, Uncle Miitie, ‘alias. “Public Energy No. 1,” after 21% seasons and 101 shows, is holding his lead on the whole mob, nationally. When $11,500-a-week Milton exposes himself to around 30,000,000 viewers a week, it takes an Ezzard Charles fight, a President Truman speech or a Bob Hope special show even to get close to his U. 8S. audience. All of which I think is considerable. “To répeat-—ufid- Berle usualy does repeat,” is one of his expressions.” § Se oo ©
THE OTHER NIGHT he brought on Vice I cadent Barkley and a touching Abraham incoln sketch. “How'd you get the Veep?” I asked him. “Called him up Sunday,” Milton said. “I said, ‘Hello, V. P.’ He said, ‘What is it, Vv? “I said, ‘I wonder if you would be gracious enough to say something about Lincoln on my program?’ “He said, ‘Well, if it’s got something to do with tolerance, I'll say it’.” Woody Kling, one of Berle’s 11 writers, went to Washington and helped “bring Barkley in” on the screen. ah BERLE, who's 42, actually “dictates” songs, going “buh-buh-BUH-buh” and humming to a pianist who takes it down—at rehearsals. He shows chorus gals how to wiggle, usually with a cigar in his face. “If this guy gets sick, we're all on relief,” says his right-hand man, Irving Gray, realistically. In the Lincoln sketch last night he made sure that a Declaration of Independence reference said “Unalienable rights” and not “Inalienable”’— as has become the fashion since. Miltie’s the absolute czar of the $39,000-a-week show. “Who's the head waiter?” I inquired of Irving Gray. “Milton,” he said. “He's head everything.” > © 9 AS A HOBBY he manages to hold on to Joyce Matthews, one of the 10 most beautiful girls in the world, although divorced from her twice. She visited his dressing room after the show and they went out together. “Who's your favorite comedian?” I asked her. “Milton,” she said. Berle finds the price of staying at the top
Americana By Robert C. Ruark
NEW YORK, Feb. 9—It was possible to be strangely unmoved by the protestatfons of poverty by our recent mayor and present ambassador to Mexico, Mr. Will O'Dwyer. Mr. O'Dwyer bared his bankbooks, admitted to loans and gifts from friends, and named the price of his charming lady’s wardrobe inh a series of interviews. This burst of gratuitous frankness struck me as rather peculiar on the part of a high government official — short of # governmental demand before a tax board or a congressional committee, Mr. O'Dwyer went south in a hurry, it is true, with a surprise appointment in the face of a smelly city corruption probe which upshook a police department and procured * a new police commissioner. But Bill has not been formally accused of anything except, perhaps, abandoning the administration of the greatest city in the world in a time of municipal emergency and possible destruction. There is no valid reason for him to open up his safety deposit vault and quote the price tags on Sloan’s cocktail gowns just on a request from a nonofficial, Jack Lait of the New York Mirror.
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THE PRIVACY of a man’s purse is supposed to be the last. thing he bares to outsiders, and the size of his treasure trove is supposed to be his own business unless a man comes in waving a subpena. But Mr. O'Dwyer whips out his bankbook, and that of his wife, to exhibit sums of less than $5000 between them. He then cries poverty to the point of telling his interviewer that he had to accept a rough $10,000 as gifts from friends in order to take the job at all. : This is an odd admission, too—that one of our top appointive diplomats must bite his buddies to afford a political nomination to a place where - “face” is all important, and the local Joneses take a power of living up to. . . Only a very wealthy man can afford the upkeep on an ambassadorship. It takes scads of
- a.
Appointment Book ‘Loé¢al Institution’
must-be-remembered items when they get home. At Ayres, the appointment book just grew..To strangers it’s a novel idea. Y Most of the messages are short and the full meaning is known only to the writer and the reader. Here are several examples: “Juanita—U know where at 4:30 p.m.” “Virginia—I am here, 9:25 a.m, Back at 10 a. 'm.” Penciled beside the information: “So are we, Virginia.” “Dorothy—Are you here today?” No answer. “Millie—Am waiting out in front, if not there am in the bra department. Mae.” Often you see a direct command. “Carl—back in 20 minutes, stay here. Marlene.” There is evidence of impatience. “Benny-—I've been looking for you for an hour. Where are you? Sally.” When weather disrupts plans for lunch or further shopping, the appointment book is the place ‘to say so with complete confidence. “Peaches--It's so darn cold I think I'll go home. Mother.” Sometimes the signals get crossed up even ‘in the appointment book. ‘Roy—will be back at 11:45. Fred.” Roy has a comment. “You're crazy. I came at 11:45. When did you leave? Nuts! Roy.” Mothers give orders to daughters. “Jennifer —go home and turn off the gas. Dad is there. Mother.” Comedians get into the act. “Tommy-—where are you? Answer! May." Where Tommy has been and how he feels is a matter of conjecture. Tommy's answer: “Hi-de-ho! Cold, eh?” How much response a message like this would get depends on how much backbone the man of the house happens to have. Ouch, “Jim—you better be here by 3 p.. m. and you better have the Valentine cards. I want you to see a suit here. Janice.” Any time of the day you can see the young and the old, the happy and unhappy, patient and impatient, thumbing through the appointment book or writing with swift jabs of the pencil. “Robert! It is now 3:20. I will be in the Beauty Salon until 4 and not one minute longer. B.J.” Bob, or Robert in this case, because B.J. has used a great deal of pressure on the pencil, obviously is late. It’s a good thing the appointment book can’t talk. The real purpose of the service is illustrated best when a flustered young lady of man swish through the revolving doors, take a quick glance at a page and all concern is swept away as if by a magic wand. Contact has been made. Joe or Sally has emerged from the forest. The meeting may be to the tune of “Happy Days” or “Hail Columbia,” but who cares? It takes two persons to make communication work.
Uncle Miltie Still Television King
very high. Last night when somebody mentioned to him, “I said something good about you today,” he said, “Oh, so you were the one?” So S 2 :
GOOD RUMOR MAN: Margaret Truman goes
to Hollywood to appear on the Railroad Hour
radio show with Gordon MacRae in March in her new NBC deal. . . . Jindy’'s waiters are peeved
‘at Geo. ‘Frazier who said in Park Bast they're
“just about the rudest.” . . Isnt. sg
jewelry -exchange investigating one of its me bers for handling “hot diamonds? 77 F
Purcell, fire laddie who became very hot, has
attys. planning a blast at D. A. Hogan. . . . Hal Boyle returned from Korea gray at the temples. . . . Veronica Lake goes to Atlanta in “Voice of the Turtle.” , ,. John R. Steelman to head Stock Exchange? . .. Sen. Lodge of Mass. is mentioned as Gen. Ike's political asst. in Europe. , \ . Switches: Marta Toren to Howard Duff, Bill CalJahan to ballerina Katherine Lee. Se > S
ALL OVER: Red Skelton’s ex-wife and mgr, Edna, reportedly will get $5000 1 a week indefinitely for her help {1 in developing Red in the deal whereby “Uncle Jim” "Harkins takes over as mgr. . . . Alan Curtiss and wife Betty Dodero return to Rome where he'll do a film. . .. Alex D’Arcy’s Parisbound to pick a line of French gals for the Latin Quarter (poor fellah!) , . . Authoress Sally under Dr. B. A. Gilbert's care at Park West. . . . Evelyn Keyes and director Fred De- { Cordova eloping? . . . Katherine ! Van Oss and Murray Salzberg said over at the Editorial that they're marrying. . . . Dinah i Shore's talking NY TV with § NBC. . . . Peep Show’s lovely Corinne Valdez of the dancing and beautiful legs is one of those who recovered from polio contracted as a child.
do uv 8 WISH I'D SAID THAT: “Jimmy Stewart is a magnifi-
cent lanky”—The 3 Suns,
» ” 2 EARL’'S PEARLS. . . . A victim of a Red smear—Lew Parker told Baby Lake—is a guy whose wife finds his face covered with a chorus girl's lipstick.
“wb b CARL KING met a character who spent so
much on wine, women and song—he had nothing left for luxuries . . . That's Earl, brother.
Corinne Valdez
Bill &’Dwyer’s Cry Of Poverty Analyzed
servants and lots of free-load booze to make an embassy go. The expense allowance is relatively slight, around $10,000 a year, and the salary of $25,000 is subject to a tax chop. oo oe oo»
W
PAPA HAS to dish out the old bubbly and serve up the caviar on a sultan’s scale. Mama must outdo the local sniffy set in clothes, in charm, in entertainment. What you receive you must pay back.
Mr. O'Dwyer leaped into a discussion of what it costs to clothe his bride, which he quoted at $5400 in clothes he bought to outfit her for the trip. This is not generally a subject a man would discuss freely, on the grounds of it being nobody’s business but that of the mister and missus, generally accompanied by strife.
Mrs. O'Dwyer is getting off very light in the plumage department. A fashion expert gives me a figure of 11,000-plus as covering the basic necessities of a lady in the public eye, without jewelry, and only one mink coat of medium price —not over-all wardrobe, dating back to years, but just the new stuff a gal might need to play ambassadress. : aed A decent mink coat alone goes around $5000 or $6000. On Bill's statement the fair Sloan is a star in the crown of frugality, since she shows up almost daily in a fresh frock. ?
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I ADMIRE Bill's willingness to open his assets
to public scrutiny with the possible demurrer that If ‘he had anything he wanted to hide he would certainly hide it, and not flaunt it. At least that would be the way I would figure for myself. If I had 10 bucks buried in the back yard that I wished to keep silent, I would not tell the first casual questioner that I had 10 bucks under the fig tree. This is basic human nature.
It boils briefly to the fact that Mr, O'Dwyer | is going to have to answer an official question- |
naire on his assets, to the district attorney of New York County, and this looks like a nice practice swing, . : According to his exhibition of private finance, he is too poor to be an ambassador to a major nation, and in any case methinks Bill doth protest too much.
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~The Indianapolis Times
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Tavern Owner. Shoots Woman Friend, Self
Grandmother, 39, and Man, 59, Are in
Critical Condition.
A 39-year-old grandmother was wounded by a 59-year-old father of three last night, who then attempted to take his own life. Both are in critical condition in General Hospital today. Doing the shooting was Wallace Anstess, owner of Wally's Cocktail Lounge, 2226 N. Meridian St. The victim was his estranged sweetheart, Miss Agnes Lucille Walton, waitress at the Hubbub
FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 9, 1951 or
Electrified Wire | To Protect Rabbits Kills Daughter, 5
PUENTE, Cal, Feb. 9 (UP)— Charles” Madden sobbed today |
that he was only trying to protect his rabbits from dogs when he ‘strung electrified wire around his yard. Instead, his 5-year-old daughter, Sylvia, got caught in the device and was electrocuted last night. Madden and his wife, Merna, found her body. On her forehead was a seared burn left when 110 volts of electricity hit her. ” o » SHE WAS near the rabbit hutches hep father sought to protect from marauding dogs and nearer to the bare copper wires which carried the fatal current. Little Sylvia apparently stepped on the eléctrified chicken wire,
Tavern, 124 W. 30th St. Miss Walton was shot in her back during an argument with Anstess in the dressing room of her three-room apartment, 1655 N. Alabama St. Witnesses told police that Miss Walton had broken with Anstess several months ago. Since then, they said, he had beaten her several times and she had him placed under a peace bond. The bond had expired, Miss Walton is a divorcee. Describes Shooting
Miss Hortense Evans, who shares the apartment with Miss Walton, described the shooting. She was eating and Wayne Getty, 39, Miss Walton's present boy friend, was talking on the telephone. Miss Walton was in the dressing room getting dressed to go to work. Anstess suddenly started banging on the apartment door. He shoved the door open and entered with both hands deep in his overcoat pocket. After a few casual words to Mr. Getty and Miss Evans, he strode into the room where Miss Walton was and the arguement developed. “I'm going to let you have it] this time,” they .said Anstess yelled. With that four shots were fired, one of which hit her.’
Getty Calls Police
Mr. Getty ran out of the apartment and called police. Anstess walked from the room garying a! 38-caliber gun in his hand, . _Anstesg left the apartment and grove his’ Cadillac to the rear. of ds tavern, where he shot himself the chest with a 25-caliber gun,
He then walked around to the front of his tavern, entered and ordered a drink. Word of the second shooting reached police as they were qyestioning Miss Evans. Policemen rushed to his tavern, where they found him seated on a couch and bleeding badly. ‘Like Cherry Juice’ “Looks like cherry juice,” he snapped. Police said he had been drinking. Only four or five patrons were in the bar at the time. Police found cartridge shells in the dressing room at Miss Walton’s apartment. The shots that missed her lodged in the floor and bureau. Miss Walton has two children. Mr. Getty is a salesman for the Dave Hockett Auto. Co. A few minutes before Anstess shot himself, police said an unidentified person called headquarters and said:
stumbled and. staggered into the charged copper strands. |
|
‘Shielded’ Boy
Begins Sentence
Sent to Plainfield
In Arson Case
| A 15-year-old boy who was con{tinually “protected and shielded” by his parents began a sentence at the Indiana Boys’ School today for arson. : The youth admitted setting fir to a $154,000 warehouse in southeastern Indianapolis and a school building. He was under investigation in six other fires, the fire marshal’s office reported, but he denied them, juvenile authorities said. ho tn The youth told Special Judge Russell Dean he set the warehouse fire because, “I wanted to get even.” He said painters at the warehouse had refused to help him get a job. He admitted starting a blaze which destroyed the Tucker-Dor-sey Manufacturing Co. warehouse, 2200 Fletcher Ave., Oct. 28, 1950. Urged Treatment Workers at the child guidance clinic, who examined the boy, recommended he should be ‘“ad~ ministered psychological - therapy
[in a controled atmosphere” fot
“his own.welfare.” . eal nd gly ' Judge Dean said he was sentencing the lad to the Boys’ School to “save him from himself” In another case, a 16-year-old confessed . burglar was sentenced to the Boys’ School for thefts of pinba§l machines and aero-
directed in Senate Bill 94, which
PAGE 19
Canterbury Scouts Make Service Report
Gets Hope Of Survival
House Unit Studies Plan For State Aid
By CARL HENN Alumni appeals to legislators to “save our school” have given penniless Canterbury College new hope of survival. A subcommittee of the House Public Education Committee today investigated the possibility of placing the historic Danville, Ind., institution under direction of one of four state schools, should fit fail to negotiate its financial crisis. Indiana University will have first choice on taking over Canterbury if the Episcopal school is unable to continue operation at the end of the spring semester, according to the subcommittee chairman, Rep. Addison Beavers, Boonville Democrat. Next choice will go to Indiana State Teachers College, Terre Haute; third choice to Purdue University, and fourth to Ball State Teachers College, Muncie. If all the schools refuse to take Canterbury, Rep. Beavers said, it probably will be disposed of as
has already passed the Senate. ‘GOP-Sponsored
Sponsored by Sen. John Kendall, Danville Republican, the bill would turn Canterbury’s buildings and grounds over to Center Township, Hendricks County, in which it is located. . If Center Township refused the property, it would become city property of Danville. If refused there, the property would be sold and the money placed in the Indiana Common School Fund. Floyd Harper, Tipton attorney, suggested the new course of action yesterday at a House Public Education Committee hearing. Mr. Harper, a graduate of Can-
was known as Central Normal College, was among; alumni, teachers; students and Danville businéssmen who &prasred at the hearing to plead for continued dperation of Canterbury. ; Cite Teacher Need Mr. Harper said the school could continue to produce teachers and train premedical students, both in short supply in Indiana.
nautical equipment from Ft. Benjamin Harrison. : The boy also admitted immoral acts with a 19-year-old boy with whom he was arrested. The (older boy, James Buckbee, 48643 Rookwood Ave., faces charges of larceny and sodomy in connection with the case.
Junk Dealer Sued In Atterbury Theft
$16,000 Action Filed Against Elwood Man
| “I'm a friend of Anstess, he told | jme to tell you he was going to {take the easy way out.” i ~ They did not know\who did the| jcalling, but a person with a simi-| {lar voice later called to find out] {about his condition. The guns used in the two shootlings were later found in Anstess’| |car,
Remington Fights
|
For Appeal Bond
Gets Maximum Term
In Perjury Case | NEW YORK, Feb. 9 (UP)—| William W. Remington, former $10,000-a-year government econ-| |omist, learns today whether he| {must go to jail while his convic-| | tion of perjury is under appeal. A court of three judges wijll| decide whether Remington, con-| victed Wednesday night of lying | {under oath when he said he had {never been a member ‘of the Com-| {munist Party, may remain free! {in $5000 bail. = i | | Federal Judge Gregory F.| Noonan imposed a maximum sen-| tence of five years’ imprisonment and a $2000 fine on Remington yesterday, declaring his convic-
|
Abraham Levi, Elwood junk dealer, was sued by the federal] government -yesterday : for $16,-| 944.75 in damages resulting from | the theft of thousands of bed sheets and pillow cases from Camp Atterbury. | The suit was filed in Federal Court by Matthew E. Welsh, U. 8. district attorney. The amount includes full restitution for the stolen goods and interest from the date of the judgment until the amount is paid. Levi was convicted of the theft along with two other men in Federal Court on Dec. 8, 1948. He received a seven-year sentence, which was never served because the conviction was set aside due to an error in the records. There will be no new trial, Mr. Welsh stated, because” Levi's doctors have said a new trial might! endanger his life. Two other men, Lt. John J. Ward and his brother Bernard J. Ward, were convicted with Levi. The trio was accused of smuggling, government property - out of the then-inactive camp. Lt Ward was said to have used his rank to pass trucks through the gates. l Lt. Ward was given a 5-year] sentence and a $1500 fine, and his brother received a 2-year sentence and a $500 fine. Both served part of their sentences. The stolen gods, which accord-
tion involved disloyalty to his| ing to the government were recountry as well as perjury. | sold, included 7800 bed sheets, - Noonan turned down an imme-| 4075 pillow cases, 48 boxes of bed diate plea for continuance of the spreads, five tons of scrap iron $5000 bail furnished from Rem-| and two bales of wool blankets ington’s family savings. His at-| and mattress covers. torneys took their case to the fed- romero eral court of appeals and Chief, HAMMOND MARINE KILLED Judge Learned Hand granted| Another Indiana Marine has Remington overnight freedom. (been killed in the Korean fighting ————— en according to a Defense Depart-
He estimated Canterbury could be operated by another state school for approximately $200,000 appropriated annually. Trustees of the school currently are struggling to raise money with which to operate during. the second semester and pay off nearly $90,000 debt. The total includes back pay to 28 faculty members, 16 of whom were dismissed at the end of the fall semester, Twelve were retained to instruct 126 students who enrolled for the spring semester on a reduced-schedule basis. Faculty members have been paid less than half the salaries called for in their 1950-51 contract. Most of those released late last month are still living in Danville, unable to move until they receive the remainder of a halfyear’s salary, they said.
2 KILLED BY STEEL BLUFFTON, Feb.. 9 (UP)— Henry Koenig, 58, and Ralph Hunnicutt, 45, Liberty Center, were crushed to death yesterday by four tons of sheet steel in Koenig's blacksmith shop. Police said the steel shifted as Koenig attempted to remove a sheet and pinned the men against an auto.
Merchant King's Story Starts in Sunday Times
® The man who built a multimillion dollar department store business on the teachings of the Bible tells how he did it in a new series starting in The Sunday Times next Sunday. ® The fabulous J. C. Penney writes his own story— FIFTY YEARS WITH THE GOLDEN RULE. ® It's a story packed with encouragement for every man, woman and youngster. , @® An answer to the “wise guys” who profess to know all the short cuts to big money. ® You owe it to yourself to read. . . .
FIFTY YEARS WITH THE GOLDEN RULE
Get Ice-O-Rama [5 "Gili “Rugustus sore Tickets. Downtown |Jr., son of Claude A. Moore, Ham- |
mond. | @® You may obtain choice
By J. C. Penney Starting Sunday
committee. '
John Buckner, Mike Gill and Tony Mulligan (left to right) presented the annual Indiana Boy Scouts Civic Service Report to Gov. Schricker at his office today. The report represented more than 450,000 hours of service by Vedios scouts.
Legislature Favors Bigger Stick in Truck-Weight War
Proposed 2-Cent State Gas Tax
Hike Is Shunted to House ‘Deep Freeze’
By ANDY OLOFSON Highway-crunching big trucks will get no special concessions from the 1951 Indiana legislature. = Instead, violators of truck weight limits—including those from out of state—will get walloped harder. Also the proposed 2-cent hike in state gas tax has been relegated to the House's “deep freeze” and probably will not be heard
about again, These trends developed today|on illegal dumping on the high-
terbury in earlier times, when it as the House Roads Committee ways. unanimously recommended the Traffic Safety
passage of only one of the 10 ’ i Ti i ’ a Two more pet bills of the Ine controversial hills assigned to the dlana Traffic Safety Council HAVE
It is House Bill 108, which per- been given reluctant, lukewarm:
mits the state to ' impound the reception by the House Publis > |truck and contents in any over-
Salty omen, os e committee 3 eet violation unl, te ine] Gin Decided to. epert_out onl ‘n Liab} limit asked by the Governor y Driver Liable without any recommendation. At present, only the driver of| TWO: Drastically amend House the truck can be held. Bill 89 to permit police to make The Roads Committee sent out|traffic arrests without warrants a split report on the bill hiking|in only two cases instead of im the tax on Diesel motor fuelia)] traffic cases. ° from 4 to 6 cents a barrel. The amended version permits But the minority report will{such arrests only in hit-run cases ask the House to postpone this|involving personal injury and bill indefinitely. That is, kill it. : The proposed gas tax hike of 2|accidents. cents already is bottled up in committee, It will take the combined to make traffic arrests only in action of eight mem-| cases where they bers to even bring the matter up/the traffic violations take again in committee. : eas 2 The ‘only other recourse would Beer Licenses need the affirmative vote of two- : to the thirds of the House to force the/granting of beer wholesalers’ If~ bill out of the committee. po its Other bills in the Roads Com-|first hurdle yesterday in the Sen~ mittee’s “deep freeze” are four ate. ; measures for changing truck 1li-| The Senate OU cense fees, a bill to shorten maxi-led a report of the Public mum truck lengths by 10 feet and| Committee, recommending pasa proposal to set up a junior/sage of the measure, and ade state highway division to super-|vanced it to second reading. vise county highway departments.| The bill forbids the deial Gas Bill Embalmed wholesalers’ applications for re-
The Roads Committee also em-| MeWal of permits on balmed the bill to give counties|grounds. It makes law violations and cities a bigger share of the/the only grounds for; such & state gas tax at the expense of denial. : iy the state highway department. Under the measure, the Indians The truck-impounding measure Alcoholic Beverage is the first of two compromise|is required to hold a publie measures that, if passed by the|ing on applications before House, will kill the controversial] ing them down. It also gives the measure calling for out-of-state| applicant the right: of ‘a court trucks over 20,000 pounds to buy|review of a denial order. Indiana licenses. The committee also approved The second measure—now be-la House bill requiring the pubfore Judiciary A—will revoke|lishing of notices of application Public Service Commission cer-| for liquor permits in cities where tificates for any trucks that three the permit is to operate,
times have been convicted of ex- El ementa ry Teachers i
ceeding the weight limit set by their licenses. A Senate bill to permit persons This bill is expected to be re- who had not completed college ported out favorably soon. ° | courses to teach in the elemens The out-of-state-truck license tary schools hit a snag yesterday. measure drew heavy fire earlier] The Senate Education Comat a public hearing because it mittee, which had , held the threatens reciprocity agreements measure four weeks, voted to rewhereby other states respect In-| port it out withouterecommenda~ diana licenses and vice versa. {tion for passage. Unless the truckers back the| The bill would allow persons two proposals to crack down on|who had completed only two truck weight limits, the out-state- years of college to teach in the truck measure—House Bill 92—| elementary schools. will be pushed. |
In the Senate a bill Jlo/State Department Pleas hire an additional 25 State Fo-| Le licemen to enforce truck weight |F or Additional Workers and size laws was approved by| WASHINGTON, Feb 9 (UP)— Roads Committee yesterday. {The State Department has made The bill directs the State High-/an “urgent” appeal for stenogway Commission to pay the State raphers and typists to work in Police Board $140,000 a year for Washington and overseas. the next two years to carry out| The department “emphasized” the program. that civil service status is not The Senate Committee also|required for the jobs which must recommended for passage a be filled. Specialized clerical per-House-passed resolution urging|sonnel also is needed for payroll
THE SUNDAY TIMES
Lincoln and Gettysburg
reserved seats for The Times Ice-O-Rama at the downtown ticket counter in the Marott Shoe Store, 18 E, Washington St. |The Gettysburg Address}. @ Proceeds from the two- = made little impression. Ac: | ——— hour ice skating show 1 customed to florid orawill go to the Infantile = tory of the day, the listeners Paralysis Fund. | were confused by the sim- @ Prices .are: Box ahd | 1 plicity of Lincoln's style. The Parquet chairs, $1.20; | applause at Gettysburg was North and South Side mild and polite. « Mezzanine, 85 cents;
East End Mezzanine, 60 = cents. Prices include. tax. Every seat is reserved.
TIMES ICE-O-RAMA Benefit Polio Fund Feb. 22, Fairgrounds Coliseum
the State Police to crack down'and communications work.
By Ralph Lane
AN
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