Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 7 April 1951 — Page 12
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THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES a a ;
PAGE 12 The Tax Evaders—No. 6—
Few Suspected Fraud Cases Ever Find Way Into Court, Says Writer
Intensive Effort by Cangjessimen To.Plug Loopholes Is Expected
By CHARLES LUCEY Scripps-Howard Staff Writer
WASHINGTON, Apr. T—Fewer than one in 10 of the suspected income tax fraud case investigattons completed by Internal Revenue Bureau special agents in the last five years ever saw the light of day in court. Only about one case in four got as far as a recommendation for prosecution from the Internal Revenue Bureau to the Justice Department. | Tr —— A fraud case can be stopped at any one of many review points in the Revenue Bureau or the Justice Department. Sometimes | they move through a labyrinth of| : checks and approvals only to be Revenue Bureau as a basis for stopped at last in the U. 8.4 study.
District's Attorney's Office where | Internal revenue people have
they are sent-finally to be tried:| complained, in connection with Maybe all this is quite regular./charges about the vagueness of There isn't any doubt but that racketeers’ returns, that it is difthe Revenue Bureau's employees ficult to prove “willful” failure
This is the sixth and last in a series on income tax evasion. Today, Mr. Lucey writes of some of the proposals for tightening the law. . :
are mostly loyal and efficient to keep books. The House subpublic servants with real devo- committee, headed by Rep. Cecil tion to their jobs. King (D. Cal.) has suggested
putting the racket boys on notice, once an inadequately supported return is made, that if it
= 2 2
BUT SOME of these fraud-case t are sore points with
ppages
ie : ' happens again there will »e : oi SE Nk on prosecution. This presumably they can't say much publicly, but would meet _the willful” requirethey think they know fraud Tent. But if this isn’t done, Conwhen they see it and dislike hay- STS may insist on meeting the ing their cases compromised by problem by tighter law.
= = the government out of court. THERE'S BEEN criticism of The compromises are covered Internal - Revenue people who by the secrecy provision of the learn the tax business thoroughincome tax law, but this whole ly while on the government payrea is to be pulled out in the roll, then step out into private open in coming congressional in- tax practice at several times the vestigations. government salary. Incidentally, Internal Revenue officials say there is considerable feeling that the special agents just aren't Internal revenue salaries are too lawyers and that what may look OW. : like good evidence to a nonlawyer Plugging loopholes in the tax just will not stand up in court. '8WS IS a process that goes on Political influence in stopping ‘onstantly. Some were closed in cases is denied. Too many bureau the last session of Congress—it people pass on every single sus- would be impossible now for Gen. pected fraud case for a political Dwight Eisenhower, for example, “fix” to be possible, they say. 0 have his European war book rated as a “capital asset,” to per-
= = 2 : mit a tremendous tax saving
Services Are Set ‘For S. A. Jones
| 1 City Employee Was Democratic Worker
Services for Samuel. A. Jones, |an inspector in the weights and {measures department at City Hall | .|the last three years, will be at 11) a. m, Monday in the Jordan Fu-| neral Home. Burial will be in |Garland Brook Cemetery at Co|lumbus.
{ Mr. Jones, who was 63, died Thursday night in Cold Spring! Road Veterans Administration] Hospital. He lived at 1018 Parker Ave. | He had been Democratic precinct committeeman of the Eighth | Precinct, Second Ward, the last {three years. Prior to that he was chief of the photostat section in| the Marion County recorder’'s office 12 years. An Army veteran of World War I, Mr. Jones was a member of Madden-Nottingham Post of
OFFICER — Mrs. Paul Linzie 2090 N. Linwood Ave., was installed High Priestess of Tarum Court, Ladies Oriental Shrine, at a public installation of officers Thursday evening in the Lincoln Hotel.
ng the groundwork for a mammoth rally sponsored by the Catholic Holy Name Society May 6 in Victory Field. Left to right are George
BUSY SKIPPERS—Steering committee members are layi
Rodenbaugh, general chairman; Robert Connelly, Ted Senn and Anthony Fussner. (Story, Page 3).
- Interior Decorator American Legion, East Tenth re ne. . Street Methodist Church, and + 8 th i 1X L Pi Raid Swank Club {former member of the Veterans| 2 Oo ICS ere ay ans | Is Dead at h8 lof Foreign Wars. lam * 8 : a : y | Survivigrs include his wife, a ed ¥ xX ly N m R lly | Phyllis; 5 sons, Robert L. and, or ian 0 e 0 0 H. Korthaus Worked Goton Lo a dstaie Me any Mammoth Religious Demonstration : On Cathedral Here vrother. Charles H...Madison; a To Be Held May 6 in Victory Field 11 Persons Arrested Heinz Korthaus, interior dec. Sister, Mrs. Clara Walker, Han- Catholic leaders in Indianapolis, beth clergy and laymen, are "At Show Boat |laying plans for a mammoth Holy Name rally May 6 in Victory, The Show Boat, swank night]
orator for 25 years for Henry R./OVer; and three grandchildren. Brehens, died yesterday in Meth- . i odist Hospital. ‘He lived at 961 Miss Gabrell Edwards | Field. More than 12,000 persons attended a similar rally last year. ot on isons 1s Host of ‘Services for Miss Gabrell Ed-| The Catholic Society has chosen the first Sunday in the month ’
Yoke Ave, | : raided early today by State ExMp. Korthaus, who was 58, as- wards, who died Wednesday, were| dedicated to the Virgin Mary for their rally. “Christian Mother- cise Tax Division officers and| sisted in the decoration of many to be at 10 a. m. today in the p,,4" ig the rally theme. [Sheriff's deputips. Eleven per-| buildings in Indianapolis, Illinois, King ‘& King Chapel. Burial was). Rodenbaugh is serving dling of traffic, publicity by radio,sons were jailed. and Florida. He was foreman of|to be in New Crown. She was 77.| g and newspaper, music by special Nine men and, two women were | the crew that did interior work| Miss Edwards, a native of Bar- as general chairman of ‘the event. ablic add nabbed as the law enforcers on Scottish Rite Cathedral, and ren County, Ky. was a longtime| The steering committee includes Pands and a public address 8ys- .ooped down on what officers helped decorate the Indiana resident of Indianapolis. She lived| yonn Carroll, Robert Connelly, tem. An impressive altar will be! jescribe as a “set-up joint” and Theater, Circle-Theater, and the at 2045 Hovey St. set-up and decorated. found a party in progress after| Indiana Roof Ballroom. | She is survived by a sister, Miss Ten Sem ard Apdony. Fosrher The Rev. Fr. Raymond Bosler, the legal drinking hours in In-| In Florida . during Millie, Indianapolis. pecia Bssis BIE Lo 0 M Car. editor of the Indiana Catholic and diana. baugh are: Al Prestel, Mr. Car- p..,.q heads the program com-| All were released on either cash | roll, Ray Borski and Joe Staab. mittee. The program will include OF property bonds during the preEvery .Catholic parish, priest, sis- an opening processional, prayers dawn hours to appear before a ter, men’s society, woman’s so- and an address with details for Magistrate's court in Beech Grove ciety and student will be called later announcement. Father Bos- Monday. upon to help make a great syc- ler's assistants are: Edmund J. Officers said the manager of cess of the occasion. Bradley, Joseph Woelfel and C. V. the Show Boat is Jim Malad. He
Plans include the careful han- Jarboe. was not slated when the others fv — Hc were arrested. *
the real
estate boom of 1925, Mr. Korthaus . fo did interior decorating in many private homes and luxurious re- City Businessma sort hotels in Miami and Coral Gables. . . A native of Hamburg, Ger- Killed nh ash many, Mr. Korthaus lived in In- | I
dianapolis 27 years. |
IN THE LAST five years the special agents completed 16,050 investigations of suspected income tax fraud. Individuals tried numbered 1423, though actual cases were somewhat fewer than this. But of those tried, 1377 were convicted, and that’s the figure Revenue Bureau people cite to suggest a good job is being done. They say the government cannot afford to be beaten in many of these tax fraud cases, and they think a conviction average of 9598 per cent is pretty good. The fraud-case area is only one among many in the Internal Revenue Bureau that Congress is getting ready to scrutinize. The Kefauver Committee disclosures of what committee members considered startling leniency will be followed by exhaustive congressional burrowing into Uncle Sam's tax collection methods.
Recommendations to plug in-
come tax loopholes, perhaps for
under what he would have been assessed under regular income tax. But the tax experts say many loopholes remain to be closed. The coming months will see an intensive congressional effort to do this, check charges of “political influence” in-tax cases and do a complete overhaul job on the whole tax collection machinery.
Mrs. Paul R. Kritsch Services to Be Monday
Services for Mrs. Anna M. Kritsch, Indianapolis resident for 39 years, will be at 8:30 a. m. Monday in the G. H. Herrmann Funeral Home and at 9 a. m. in St.. Catherine of Siena Catholic Church. Burial will be in St. Joseph Cemetery. Mrs. Kritsch, who was 69. died Thursday in her home. 926 E Iowa St.
even the most far-reaching over- St. Catherine's Church.
haul of the collection machinery since the income tax became a
law in 1913, may Je the result. » s >
DISCLOSURES o! the Kefauver Committee in California that taxfree business groups of an “educational” nature may be tossing for purposes never
about funds intended by Congress--for lobbying and in political campaigns, for example—will be checked in further investigations. Some tax experts say big revenue is being lost to the government in this field. One legislative , ossibility to be studied is whether individuals whose income is derived from sources other than wages should be required to file a statement of assets and liabilities, or net worth, with income tax returns. ‘Some
Survivors include her husband, aul R.; a daughter, Mrs. Dorothy Meincken; a son, Paul J.: five sisters, Mrs. Gertrude Teipen, Mrs. Peter Kiefer, Mrs. Camillus Rodenrider, and Mrs. Charles Maier, all of Indianapolis, and Sister M. Ruth, Ambia; and three grandchildren.
Haushalter Rites Will Be Monday
Services for Mrs, Margaret Haushalter, aunt of Wray E Fleming, Indianapolis attorney
and general counsel for the Hoosier State Press Association, will be at 9 a. m. Monday in St. Francis de Sales Catholic Church. Burial will be in Crown Hill. She was 80.
ilonial Chapel.
Services will be at 1 p. m. Mon-| day in the G. H. Herrmann Fu-| neral Home with burial in Crown
Hill.
Survivors include his
mow, and two brothers, erich and August, all of Germany.
Mrs. Kippen Services Are Set
Services for Mrs. Helen J. Kip-| pen, who lived at 4050 W. Washington St, will be at 10 a. m. Indianapolis. in Moore & Kirk Co- g34 PIL Burial will be at
Monday
Arcadia.
Mrs. Kippen, who was 30, died of Hos-
Thursday in St. pital.
Vincent's
A lifelong resident of Indianapolis, Mrs. Kippen was employed She was a member of in The Wm. H. Block Co. post Monday in the Montgomery Fuoffice at intervals since 1940. She pera] 1 was a member of the 49th St.
Christian Church.
Surviviofs include her husband, ters: Edmund; her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Roscoe Stewart; two brothers, Everett and Harlen Stewart, Columbus:
all of Indianapolis;
wife,
Martha; a sister, Mrs. Lilli - . > n je Re Broad Ripple Ave. the last three
Rites to Be Monday For Ralph O. Lovell
Ralph O. Lovell, owner of a sign painting business at 915
years, died in General Hospital at Cincinnati yesterday following a traffic accident. Mr. Lovell, who was 56, was injured fatally when his car collided with a New York Central freight train. He was en route to Washington, D. C. native of Clarksville, Mr. Lovell was a longtime resident of He lived at 705 E.
An Army veteran of World War I, Mr. Lovell was a member Broad Ripple Post of the American Legion. Broad Ripple Christian Church, and Broad Ripple Businessmen's Association. Services will be at 1:30-p. m. Home., Burial will be at Noblesville. Survivors include two daughMrs. Martha Harrison and Mrs. Barbara Itce, Indianapolis; a sister, Mrs. Orva Goodnight, a brother, Max, Los
: and three Angeles; and four grandchildren. sisters, Miss Evelyn Stewart and - m———
Mrs. Kathleen Wessel, Indianapo- s ’ lis, and Mrs. Annabelle Day, Bed- Businessmen S Group
ford, O.
Rites Today for Actor HOLLYWOOD, Apr. 7 John Alexander,
member of the Guild.
Screen
at Ontario, Cal.
(UP) — sponsor Funeral services will be held to- Prayer Apri ; day for veteran character actor 9 p. m. in Hotel Lincoln. 86, a charter Actors Alexander, who retired re- with the program. It will include cently from films; died Thursday special
To Sponsor Prayer Day
The Christian Business Men's Committee of Indianapolis will a full 12-hour Day of 21 from 9 a.m. to
Many leading ministers of various denominations will assist and
music, testimonies
prayer.
. te i Each Had Bottle Sign of Spring | Each of the offenders charged
250,000 See Washington's iwi: hit oe:
Act had a bottle or “pottles of
liquor, officers said. Those | ° : charged with the 1935 Act violaCherry Blossom Festival Robert L. Brime, 26, Terre . . Haute; Bryce Christensen, 31, Miss Wyoming to Be Crowned Queen PE orn. Conover, 31 Near Trees Japs Gave a Token of Thanks Harrison; Donald Baxter, 23,
Bloomington; Mary Beed, 27, of vw 925 N. Alabama St.; Russell Wright, 23, of 4930 E. New York St., and Lowell Gesrries, R. R. 1, Gosport. 7 Charged with‘ being drunk are: Pfc. Gonzilo Dominguez, 33, Ft. Harison; Carl Gilborn, 23, of 4425 N. Keystone Ave.; Charles Endres, 33, Thorntown; Wan Swiney, 33, of 1121 8S. Meridian °St., and =. Blanche Sexton, 30, of 2409 Car-
By United Press WASHINGTON, Apr. T—"Loveliest of trees, the cherry now, and 250.000 sight-seers saw them today in the capital's annual Cherry Blossom Festival. The cherry trees, aglow with color, blushed pink in full blossom and drew visitors from all over the country with their magic. Special trains from Pennsylvania, Ohio and West Virginia and sxtra cars on regular trains
brought’ oat - of - towners by the Local Death
The trees, more than 500 of
them, rim Washington's Tidal gervices for George M. Bundy, rollton Ave. Basin like a wreath. Their pale
blossoms contrasted softly with [OTmerly of Indianapolis, will be Officers sald padlock action the aark waters and the first Monday at Manhasset, I. I, New 3Bainst the establishment would’ le aa wat 8 Y C be up to the prosecutor following yellow leaves of spring. ork. Chairman of the board of {ne tra] of those arrested. | A Shy Brunet H. & A. Selmer, Inc., he died of
The festival officially started ® Beart attack Thursday night in Four Seek Place on
last night with the selection of Elkhart. 4 IU Board of Trustees
: XA ramming») MI. Bundy, who was 75, .an T Hate Serv Maldi Tarris, “Miss Wyoming, his son, George Jr. also of Man- BLOOMINGTON, hp r
as cherry blossom queen. She Was pagget, were visiting the Selmer Alumni of Indiana University | to be crowned today by Interior band instrument plant in Elkhart. will have the choice among four Secretary Oscar L. Chapman at In Indianapolis, Mr. Bundy candidates for the alumni posithe Jefferson Memorial near the Was a stenographer in the Inter- tion on the University’s board of cherry trees. x = Sr -—— trustees now held by Mrs, Mary ay Torre. a oh bricet trom Other Obituaries on Page 7. Rieman Maurer, of Indianapolis. MISE 1arris, 3 Sn) Ho Nominating petitions have been Rock Spring. Wyo., is an Interior national Typographical Union of- Eo
received by Robert A. Miller, uniDepartment employee. In her fice and worked for Standard Oil versity my in behalf . of!
court were 51 princesses repre- Co. It was here that he met AlexhPa @ Mrs. Maurer, who has t senting the other states and U. 8. andre Selmer, then clarinetist with pope” or the board 2 in possessions. Twenty Latin Ameri- the Cincinnati Symphony. erty ce 3} can beauties represented each of He later joined the Selmer com- Rr. «A '
: BI i ; Mic M. Mi fhe South and Central American pany in New York and was named BY a aickey. Eien, Republics. : head of the American branch of yon Ss. Ramsey Bloomington | Musical Pageant the company when he was 23. physician. The election, con-
Mr. Bundy helped the Selmer
The festival also featured a ducted by mail ballot, will be held
congressmen think this would im- Mrs. Haushalter, who died yes-
brothers, Henri and Alexandre, of
Council of Churchwoen
musical “The Story of
The Indianapolis Council of Churchwomen will present
pose unreasonabl. bookkeeping terday, had been living with a sia Baa Ce SY oiPariy, develop the American hush): 2? JURe commencement, demands on too many people. niece, Mrs. Mildred Riebe, 2411 » ® Spring,” an 7 & ha d o 4 Ness which was moved from New They suggest maybe the require- Coyner Ave. : To Install Officers Friday The Re rte 2a oe York to Elkhart in 1927. The Bound Over to Jury | ment should be placed only resident of Indianapolis 25 I halkowsky's , ~ Bundy family returned to New |n Stabbin Case against those once caught in tax ve irs. Haushalter was a na- Miss Flowers. York in 1935. 9 f
evasion tive
the statute of limitations for will- East St. Louis (Ill) merchant,
v f Shelbyville. She was the Muriel Lester, London, in an address and install new officers at Still another proposal is that Widow of John Haushalter, former their annual meeting Friday in Irvington Methodist Church.
The pageant will be repeated Tne elder Mr. Bundy, when at- A 35-year-old man accused of tomorrow, and the festival will tending business college, had been wielding a razor today was bound!
Other information regarding Miss Lester's speaking engage- close with a Marine band concert 5 clarinetist with a dance band °Ver to the Marion County Grand]
ful failure to file an Income tax and was a member of the St. ments here Thursday and Friday and facts about her distinguished and a fireworks display 4n the ang jater a showboat, circus, and JUTY On a charge of assault and
return be increased from three Francis Church. years to six years. = = - ANOTHER study will weigh Jordan Funeral Home until Monthe idea of making failure to file 42y morning,
a return, or failure to keep-books . and records, a felony instead of Joseph D. Dunn
career as a world-famous social worker and religionist appear in €VenIng.
Only survivors are nieces and jpother spot on the church pages nephews. Friends may call at the yoqay.
their meeting at 9:45 a. m. and cate the gifts brought by the can hear the address by Miss Lester Women.
(battery with intent to murder. | | Robert Lee, 229 E. 11th St.,| {was bound over by Judge Joseph| Services for Mrs. Lulu D. Diy] Fonvard, unictpa Court 3, thder}
who died Thursday in her home, Lee was charged with cutting!
concert’ musician. cssmiiniss The trees were given to the na-
T. Ick. Mr. Ice, president of the tion by the Japanese government Mrs, Steve 11)%
Flanner House Board, will dedi- as a token of thanks for Amerihelp after the Japanese
earthquakes of 1922.
The churchwomen will open
a misdemeanor. The difference would be that a violator could go to federal prison:for five years
rather than being let off with a the Harry W. Moore Peace Chapel with burial in Washington Park. The Kefauver Committee’s dis- He was 81, Mr. Dunn, who died Thursday the
year or less in a local jail.
closure of gangland’s disdain for
. bookkeeping in any form will in- in General Hospital, had lived in
sure detailed study by a House ways of means of tightening present law on this point.
and means subcommittee born in Morristown.
A bale of Marion
Services for Joseph D. Dunn, who lived at 4531, E. Washington St., were to be at 2 p. m. today in
Indianapolis 65 years. He was
Survivors include a brother!
A., Indianapolis,
chosen
at 10:20 a. m,
‘Women Who Work’ The program committee for the day's
Mrs. H. C. Gemmer and Mrs. Grover L. and a Alfred Swanigan will make the the social service department of
has dent, will give two talks: theme: lights of Work During the Past
Two Talks Mrs. Dorsey D. King, who ig completing three years as presi“High-
Hartman, director of
racketeers’ returns is to be fur- sister, Mrs. Dora Sedwick, Elletts- formal presentation of needed ar- the Church Federation; the Rev.
, hished - the committee by the ville.
BAA a
i hse ite
PARTLY clover ano CLOUDY ARIAS
Ir
LOPE. CORR, 19511 TONIGHT AND of thie nation with most of the Valley sections, The western
'TOMORROW—Cloudiness and showers wil c
Fs ve
WAGHER ALL RIGHTS RESERVED, |
er activity around the Great Lakes a
7 N SNOW SNOwiRy [ITT i 5 FLURRIES Via RAIN 1
5
prodecs oy
me such. of the castor third
of the cguntry will be generally fair, #2 ,
2
i ton B. Miller,
i
Iticles for Flanner House to Harry Leonard C. Hunt, Wheeler Mission
|superintendent; the Rev. Howard |'T. Lytle, director of the Good Will
£ Industries; Harry Barrett, Marion | . | County Home, and Miss Leonora
Winter, director of the Social
om Service De - : | Servic partment of General By Science Service i ; dent-faculty selection committee, : Hospital. WASHINGTON, Apr. 7—rair Good Beef Cows and Mr. Bauer is a holdover mem- | The five organizations men- reception of shortwave radio| CHAMPAIGN, Ill. (UP) — Aber of the present board.
tioned all receive aid from the broadcasts is promised radli0igo0q4 manager of a beef cow herd! Se — listeners after next Tuesday. But|,on earn $128 a calf if he follows Leva Points to
The Rev. Henry G. White, host Until then reception will continue five good tips, the Universi : : oh to be disrupted by weak signals g p sity of Of UMT Passage
the And fading, and occasional black-|
Council of Churchwomen
pastor, will speak on “Spirit {Vitamins for Workers” at afternoon session. The Rev. Benpresident of the {Indianapolis Ministerial Association, will install the new officers. | Mrs. William Baumheckel will (induct the new chairman and vice| chairman of departments and| committees and deliver the clos-| ing address on “A ILook Ahead and Work to be Done.” | New officers elected some
i months ago who will be installed ; are:
Mrs. Baumheckel, Mrs. W. S. Hague, Mrs. A. R. Kauffman,
; (tant; Mrs. R. E. Royer, corresponding secretary;
Mrs.. D. RY
|
| Kellum, treasurer, and Mrs, Wal-|
ter L.-Thoms, assistant; Mrs, L.|
bureau of standards here warned feed, and some cott this morning.
311 Trowbridge St, will be at/Jimmy Green, Tyndall Towne, 1:30 p. m. Monday in Calvary ®arly on The oping of ee 2 : e an ent at a stop light Tabernacle Church. Burial will be on the driving abilities of the in Washnigton Park. She was 78./ two men. He was arrested Dec, 11.
Atom Spy Trial Judge
Takes Needed Vacation NEW YORK, Apr. 7 (UP) —
“Women Who Work.” The Coun-' Three Years” and the morning ; R. HKauf- Born in Hamilton County, Mrs. On a warrant after Mr. Green cil of Churchwomen represents devotions titled:, “Hands, the Federal Juke one fod thiee hy ved in Indiahunolis i yeare signed an affidavit against him. group who work without Tools of Our Souls.” eh om 8 as a member of Calvary ree " oh ) é spy trial, headed to Church. Fri Hh wages. Dr. Cleo Blackburn, head . give * different persons will pam Beach. Fla. today on a Sliiizeh, Fiaenas Tiny call at J. 4: Two From City Serve of Flanner House, will speak forispeak’ in a symposium on “Our needed vacation. until noon Mond On IU Union Board the women who work for wages. Work for Others.” They are Dr. Judge Kaufman spent many ay. Times Rtate Service
Survivors include her husband, | sleepless nights while he pondered gieve: a stepdaughter, Mrs. Mar. |, SLOOMINGTON, Apr. 7—Two
the decisions. He got less than garet ILebrock; two stepsons Indianapolis youths, Robert =. 10 hours sleep in the week In prank and Steve, all of Indian- Bonn, Fig Tin Bojin Ave. and which he decided to sentence 10 apolis; and two sisters, Mrs. Mable, y on aur, 3215 Sutherland death atomic spies Julius and proege, Cassadaga, Fla., and Mrs. | ve. JH setve on Indiana Uni-
OF versity’s Union Board, the govEthel Rosen rg Pearl Chrisman, Indianapolis. [Lorait) body for the Memorial
Union. Mr. Bohn was chosen by a stu-
Fair Reception Ahead Tells How to Raise
Need
Illinois agriculture college reports. | The tips: Winter the cows on| BIRMINGHAM, Ala, Apr. 7| w-cost rations (hay, bundle|(UP)-—Assistant Secretary of De- | onseed meal); fense Marx Leva says it would be have good calf crop (about 95.6);|“perilous” {if Congress fails to calves should be born early (from provide: universal military train-
How Do the AA | March 1 to 30); see that cows are|ing.
heavy at Weaning time (about| Mr. Leva, visiting friends here, unds) and have good qualTeams Stack Up? po 8 q said rejection of the UMT bill What's the pitch on the
ity calves. which he framed would indicate | : ta Russia that this country fis teams the Indianapolis Indi- Ray Bolger One Fired weakening In its determination to ans will battle for the American Association pennant this
. resist Communist expansion. But It Didn't Take season?
: : BOSTON, (UP)-— Many years Set Bargaining Vote Sports Editor Eddie ago a young fellow was fired by! WASHINGTON, Apr. 7 (UP)—
outs, forecasters of the nationall;,
Ash
Eo rn JATHEC TID and Mrs. Morten Hansen, ‘vice’ has been reporting the make- the First Nationa! Bank ; CATH hd: : $ : 1 B: of Bos- Employees of the Lafayette, Ind.,| 4 SHO win} bos ak REA presidents in order; Mrs. Houston up of our Tribe from the day ton for tap dancing in the corri- plant of the Aluminum Co. of LEE (VE v). Snow Cory, recording secretary; and the Indians pitched their tee- dors, : : |America were ordered today to] ; Wr 4s | |Mrs. D. Carlyle Venerable, assis- pee in Florida. The discharged émploye’s card, hold a National Labor Relations
Now, the Times sports section takes a look around the loop at the other teams. The first look comes in to-
{which still is in the bank's per- Board election. They will Je{sonnel index, carried this nota-!termine whether they desire tion: representation for the purposes “Reason for being discharged: of collective bargaining by the
r™ - -
J J. Riddle, historian; Mrs. H. A.| morrow’s SUNDAY TIMES 'n [No future.” CIO . United Steelworkers of Ohio and Tennessee |Vertrees, auditor, and Mrs. C. A. Hiugsports section. The discharged employee’s| America, - the A¥L Afuminum Childers, parliamentarian, ; - name was Ray Bolger. Workers Union or by neither,
| ' “| oe J = ¥ wa ZTE
Magazine
Is Always Colorful!
[mn
Magazine
Is Always
Entertaining!
Magazine
Is Included As a Part of the BIG
SUNDAY
TIMES
Every
Col | RH Dhoni Mace Yom Order Park Home-Doliversd
Copy “Wsonlya dime”
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SATU ANN(
| Death
————————— BOEHM—F E. 10th sister of M Mary Kale Albert of Thursday. JORDAN 1 .. 10th Bt. a neral Mon Friends inv
BRFINERside Dry ather of rother of Himelright
ARY, Mon vited. Prie
BROCKMA loved mi man: Mrs. Catherine ‘Rothert ar dianapolis, Foneral RROS,, 53 Crown Hi chapel afte FRAME —E of Mary trand Fre Frame, In Gray, Cri Luzar, Le James An grandchild
pm CONKLE 1} Michigan € Washingto st funeral day. GREENE Robert | Ye Lyo rs. 5 s vived, by Friday eve GOMERY | dian St, invited. In
etery, Aur at mortua
HARRIS! Ave. wif of Mrs. Mrs Myr life Thursc dav. Apr IRVINGTO {n~ton St, town. Pri HAUSHAL 2411 Coy Catherine and nephe Friends ms NFRAL H after 7 p. | day, Apr, De Sales ( Burial Cro
HUDSON— husband Ann and Louise His Kokomo: N cazo; Willi gon died
Friends mi
JOVFS-—Sa N. Parke father of | L.. Clinton Leonard Charles Jo grandchild: Friends ma NERAL HC 7p m, B Apr. 9, 11 Burial Gar Jumbus, In
KIPPEN-—I] ington, daughter © Rosco Ste and Harle Wessel, Mi dianapolis. Bedford, ¢ Thursday.
Ave, a Friends in KORTHAU Yoke Ave tha Korthas mow. Fried passed awa 1pm, a NERAL H Friends in Hill Maus piter Tp
LOVELL~] father o and Mrs. | by 4 sran Orva Goo passed awi ©. Priday MONTG Meridian | Friends we vilie Ceme! MOrtuary i
PARKER loved son father of } Waiter Pal Gebhart, Reida F.C
Mrs. Horne Friends mi STIRLING
PARTL Frank Thu E. Partlow ney. srandmothe mother of Apr. 8. at & KIRK N Station St. Sutherland PICKENS 78. passe nera! Mond PROS. CE lliinois, Bi after 5 p 1 RISLEY--F Ave., pas ing. Service AN MORT
SAHM—Kal pect 8t.,
Christina F Mrs. Edith 1. Sahm. pi al Tuesday, HERRMAN! 8. East St Church, F: Joseph. Fr nera! home
STEINSBEF husband « father of brother of berger. Mrs beth Swine Mrs. Thelm day eve. at Ave. Frien FUNERAL Sunday aft Monday af LAWSON 1 Ind. Service funeral hon ty pm WISEMAN WwW. Wash Wiseman, p neral Mond FUNERAL Bt. Burial call at the Sunday.
WRIGHT — 18th., wif mother of | jeshurg, In Timmons, M Eugenia 8 Parker, pas may call a HOME. 242 Sunday. PF 10:30 a. m. Anderson C YARBER - Viney Yi also survive great. rand hursday § the home London, In ays Pp. Church, F ondon Cen ING SER! please copy Bf fle Legal Nc ————— NOTIC! FIVE. Each bank gives notice t 1. Elfective ness on Mond will adopt and ive-Day Ban Chapter 108 o of Indiana, ar 2. Saturday, Saturday ther as, and will which the bar authority of & 3. Each ban which are leg: diana law, In which a lega other than 8 open for bus
Notice is he address unkn owner to Lot Second Addit County of Ma Noble N. She arion Count fon requestin B-2 to permi rooms for re service sl Unless the
