Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 9 September 1951 — Page 2
o,
Watch lt—Everybody
TaxBack Hikes That Hit
By United Press @ to Jack:
WASHINGTON, Sept. 8—-The Senate Finance he : . There's a boy out Committee gave final approval today. to a tax increase on see you.” individual and corporation incomes and to higher excise Jack went out on the porch.
y , gasoline, liquor, beer, automobiles, and There on the sidewalk stood the levies on gigpress & q ? a WB oL boy he'd befriended. Only 10 feet
After two sessions today, how-
C ONea Stopped 'riters: Slug ad He ls Chief of Police
Continued From Page One
had. .
there to
separated them.
the gun pointing at Chief said. “The next thing I knew,. he fired and the bullet knocked me down. I was-dazed a little bit, but not quite knocked out.
raising bill. designed to boost me,” the
government income by about $6 billton. epu orney
Proposals to relax an earlier decision narrowing the tax ex-
- emption of farm co-operatives [3 were still pending. The commit- y : tee will meet again Monday in an| attempt to finish the bill which] Senate leaders want to bring to the floor and pass next week. Cigarets Up Along with the personal
‘head. It was bloody. I picked the lead out of my - forehead ‘and
Continued From Page One
The attacker hadn't word. He just stood. there and “laughed out loud.”
and
corporate income .increases‘ of “What the hell's the matter about $4,467,000,000 a year, Chair- with you?’ Jack demanded. man Walter F. George (D. Ga.), “Boy, that was a good shot,”
reported that the committee had reaffirmed excise taxes which would yield nearly $1.3 billion. These included a one penny increase on a package of cigarets, a half-cent more on a gallon of gasoline, $1 more on a barrel of beer, and a liquor tax boost equal to about 27 cents on a fifth of 85 proof whisky. : The present 5 per cent tax - on the manufacturer's, price on an automobile would go up to 8 per cent. A 10 per cent tax would be| applied to the manufacturer's price of many electrical appli-| ances not now taxed, including! vacuum cleaners, dishwashers} and washing machines. | Exempt Baseballs a A few op changes were COV. Ralph Gates made today in an earlier excise qq. St | “I'm convinced he never was tax decision. The committee Ye-/ : / {sore at me, even when he fired versed itself and voted against] When the Democratic admin- the shot. It was just something applying the two-cents-a-gallon istration of Gov. Schricker care funny going on in his mind,” the gasoline tax to diesel fuel used|into power in 1949. Attorney Chief explained. in highway vehicles, pending aiGeners) ’ Emmett MeManamon) Why didn't the bullet kill Jack staff study. This trimmed $10 kept r. Coughlin on because of (Neal? The Chief often wonders, uiliion from ihe estimated yield is FE > hale) Artal ®|and never will know for certain. oe ‘reversal restored the of Mr. McManamon’s top men, | Erobably the powder in the House-approved rate of 15 per| Popular and active in many Shell was ol and had lost its t th nufacturer’s price organizations, Mr. Coughlin POWer. It broke the skin, but or i pian cnt that\nevertheléss was an independent |1d0’t penetrate my skull. Also, hy ne and op ndar Ts and was a steadfast. think the gun, which was an so 0 primary Seo y : {old model pistol, was too old to schools. The committee previously fighter against. machine politics
Had voted to keep this tax at|in the party. One of his bitterest Pe effective,” Chief O'Neal said. “Whatever it was, it made me
10 per cent. battles was against former SecAs part of today’s action, the|retary of State Tom Bath, now chief of police today instead of a committee voted to exempt base-| GOP chairman of St. Joseph resident of Holy Cross. balls and baseball equipment| County, whom he described as| Jack never did press charges from the tax and to hold the tax|‘“a machine politician.” j2gamst the unwitting youth. on faping squipment at per Member Of Organizations Two years after the incident, cent. Sleds, skates and lacrosse Jack O'Neal left his job as and cricket equipment were, \C¥ COURS WAS o Pst XANES DOU maker and Joined the | added to the sporting goods items |p, *, act state president of Police force. Never in his 40 years subject to tax. the Elks Association, gnd a mem- On the force has he been touched
i ber of the state and American PY a bullet. Believes U. S. Safe var associations, American Le-| The Chief kids himself about Say gion, 40 and 8, Indianapolis Press| the old head wound: “I'm the only
From Direct Attack/ Cub and Indianapolis Athletic|cop on the force with a hole in
Club. {his head,” or “Now you see why WASHINGTON, Sept. 8 (UP)—| He attended St. Thomas|I have lead for brains.” The United States and Alaska are| Aquinas Catholic Church here Chief O'Neal carries a perman#reasonably safe” from “direct|and was a member of St. Joseph's ent reminder of the shooting. attack” at present, according to|Church in South Bend. Although the scar is hardly visAir Seeretary Thomas K. Fin-| Services will be at 10 am.jjple, it itches in cold water. letter. Tuesday in St. Joseph's Church, | So if you see the town's No. 1 But Mr. Finletter does not think | South Bend. Burial will be in the! oop scratching his forehead, you “the same thing is true” of Eg. uauscleum of Highland Ceme- , ,w he's thinking — thinking rope. Ju | tery, South Bend. |about how lucky he is.
Mr. Finletter’s views were given, to a Senate Appropriations Sub-| committee recently and were re-| leased ‘last night. | “An attack on our forces in| Europe would bring us into the, war and our strategic power) would be brought to bear,” Mr. Finletter said. » 4 “I think the main defense of) Europe today, and certainly one] of the principal reasons why there is no attack upon Europe! as yet, is the fact that those who might make the attack know| 888 there would be violent strategic, § counterattack on them,” he tes-| tified. |} |
Takes Oath as Envoy |§
BISMARCK, N. D., Sept 8 (UP) — Thomas Whelan, St. Thomas, N. D., was sworn in as! the United States’ new ambas-| © sador to Nicaragua today,
—— testes i - rh ——— t——————
came the proud answer. was all he said.
Handed It Over
Jack ran down the steps and| said: “Give me that gun.” It was| handed over without hesitation. : “Later on, when I thought it over, I guess it was foolish of t me to demand that gun, because there was another live bullet in lit,” Chief O'Neal said. :
Jack took the gun, walked into his back yard and smashed it with a hammer. The youth left. | The 19-year-old attacker never ‘did explain what made him turn on his best friend. When Jack pressed him for an explanation (later, he couldn't remember any[thing about it.
Republican | Something Funny administration. He lived at 1 E.!
That
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{about the only frend the youth Mrs. Delores Powell, at the time day—1-year-old Wayne Powell
“Fhat went on for a few years, PeIt Sparks, 22, of 1354 S. Treuntil that shocking day .in 1909. : oa It was about suppertime when the [eon Powell, Plainfield, and re-
knock came on the front door. marry him, Answering it, Mrs. O’'Nea] called] Mr, Powell was the dead boy's
Tr i I didn't " 't see him very well beever, the committee still had Frank Cou hin | dn’t see him : | failed to finish its work on a tax- ’ {cause it was dusk. I didn’t see
“TI got up and felt my fore-|-
.’ | threw it down on the porch.” . Many Surprised
said a]
lan article about Carol in Ameri-
THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES | He Toddled Into Path of Stepfather-to-Be's Car—
An Indianapolis mother who had just agreed to remarry her former husband saw her 1-year-old son crushed to death yesterday under the wheels of his car.
The child, Wayne Powell, toddled out of his home,
11242 8." Tremont Ave. and in front of the car.
His mother,| - Two traffic deaths in a single and Police Det. Sgt. James T. Gaughan—yesterday raised the Indianapolis traffic toll to 40 dead. By this time last year 46 had been killed.
{wags telling her first husband, El-
mont Ave. she would seek a
divorce from her present husband,
{and Mr, Sparks just had returned { father |from the grocery store. . She had ' taken the groceries and the chil- | Mr. Spark's happiness that he dren into the house and returned )
{was to be reunited with his for- to talk to Mr. Sparks of her plans {mer wife and their two, children, for their future. :
(David, 2, and Leon, 3, was short-] But the baby followed Mrs. |ltvea. Powell outside. : He had driven only a quarter of, “I loved that child like I do hy A a block when he heard Mrs. my own son,” Mr. Sparks told Dar CHILDREN =Loon and {Powell's screams. He looked back police. “I didn’t know he was in| ay! iad ayne |to see her bending over the child’s front of the car.” | Powell (lett to right). ‘ {bady. | “I don’t blame Elbert,” the!from Mr. Sparks more than two! | Mrs. Powell clutched the child| hysterical Mrs. Powell sobbed. years ago. She and Mr. Powell {in her arms and carried him to a “I know it was an accident.” She had been separated about six| davenport outside the house. | held her other two children close months. She indicated she would] The little boy was dead. to her. |go through with her plans for the Mrs. Powell, her three children, Mrs. Powell, 20, was divorced divorce and remarriage.
Mother Sees Her Year-Old Son Die Under Wheels of
| born.
___ SUNDAY, SEPT. 9, 1951
Auto
¥
; THE DRIVER—Elbert Sparks. THE MOTHER—Mrs. Delores | “T want to make 2 Home tor Powell. | my former wife and the children,” The mother and her children Mr. Sparks said. “I hope this have been living in the three-room| won't change anything.”
house where Mrs. Powell was| The child's body was taken to {the Bean Blossom mortuary. .
§ Iran Threatens To By-Pass Vote | On Oil Ultimatum
| WORLD REPORT, PAGE 25
TEHRAN, Iran, Sept. 8 (UP) | —Deputy Premier Hossein Fatemi {said tonight the government will [not wait for a parliamentary vote of - confidence before handing {Britain an ultimatu threaten-
That Our Carol Didn't Place 1st
Continued From Page One
can magazine. And Here Carol Is
The article told how Carol pays
her entire way through Indiana University (she'll .be a senior this
fall) giving shows with her g ing to ‘expel British oil technimarionettes, and how Kappa a = ; jSlans if Britain doesn't accept Delta Rho fraternity chose her aM: (Iran’s terms for settling the its national sweetheart. FOURTH—Miss Arkansas. oil crisis. :
The secretary wrote to the Lafayette Junior Chamber of Commerce suggesting it try to persuade Miss Mitchell to enter the contest for Miss Indiana — with the vista of Atlantic City and the Miss America pageant beyond. The Lafayette Chamber relayed the suggestion to the Jaycees in Rochester, Miss Mitchell's home town, and—well, here Carol is tonight.
is scheduled to make another at-| "| tempt tomorrow” to win the ap-| proval of the Majlis (lower house! of Parliament) of the ultimatum which will give Britain two weks to accept Iran’s terms for settle-|
350 remaining technicians ex-| pelled. | The aged premier's first at-| tempt earlier this week was stymied by the lack of a quorum. | However, Mr, Fatemi told the press after a two-and-a-half] {hours cabinet meeting that the! ‘. |ultimatum, already approved by| . [the Senate (upper house), will be| forwarded to the British em-|
Believes Russia Set on War
WASHINGTON, Sept. 8 (UP)— Deputy Secretary of Defense Robert A. Lovett does not think that Russia “has deviated one iota from the ultimate purpose of . . : 10 warships already standing by international conflict.” Sailor Wins Leniency in the Pérsian Gulf for the pro-
{ . . +f + tection of British personnel in Mr. Lovett's views, given on On Timely Parking Alibi ; : - Aug. 20 to a Senate appropria-| 4 Iran in the event of an emergen
MINNEAPOLIS, Sept. 8 (UP) cy, reports from London said.) amumutes, were disclosed _, sailor who was fined $4 for
arking in a military zone be- . v “Regardless of what happens in| hind 1B building ry which he Predicts ‘Rocket’ Moon Korea I can see no deviation from worked received a suspended] LONDON, Sept. 8 (UP)—An their purpose whatsoever,” he sentence yesterday when he ex-| American rocket expert predicted testified. “In fact, a cease fire OF plained that parking permits for today that it will be possible to! a ‘dwindling away of the effort in the gone were issued only to: [plant the first “artificial moon” Korea might expland the area of| «Officers who don’t get to work |in the heavens within 10 years if uncertainty as to where another ynti) 10 a.m. women who park money for the project is approincident might occur. {there and go shopping; civilian|priated now. Lt. Comdr. Frederick “I think we simply have to face physicians who get $25 a day for|C. Durant addressed an internaup to that.” |examini drafted men and who, tional “rocketeers’” convention. HI
bassy. (Meanwhile, Britain dispatched |
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{and back alleys. Premier Mohammed Mossadegh | In later years, Mr. Sloan had not injured.
ment of the oil crisis or have its! |
four more destroyers to join the]
John Sloan Dies; Dean of Painters |
HANOVER, N. H., Sept. 8 (UP) taken to painting landscapes; he | % , ist | tudio in New. | —John Sloan, 80, pioneer realist| maintained a home s | painter and “dean of American | York ‘but spent his summers in | a—— Santa’ Fe, N. M., for. the last artists,” died today at a Hanover 3g years. { hospital. . eh | Mr: Sloan, afflicted with can- Woman Killed, Son Hurt
[cer for some years, underwent A ¢ Car Is Overturned
{an operation several days ago. |His second wife, Artist Helen| ZANESVILLE, O., Sept. 8 (UP) Farr, was at his bedside when —Mrs. Isabel Horton, 45, of Ded{he died. ham, Mass., was killed today and | A native of Lock Haven, Pa. her 1ll-year-old son, Peter, critihe first won fame as a member cally injured as the car in which of the realist “ashcan” school of they were riding failed to make a | painting in New York. He and curve and turned over near here. his colleagues scattered conven-| Police said the accident took | tional art forms at the turn of place on U, S..Highway 22, seven the century by painting such miles southwest of Zanesville. The subjects as slums,” waterfronts victim's husband, David, 48, and another son, David Jr. 17, were
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SAN FI today a. tre Foreign Min tion “for a
Russia, Pol vakia did nof end the war w sneak attack Dec. 7, 1941, NEW YO! Gen. Dougl watched the Senators tod treaty was But he w San Franci: Dulles, archi sent him thi “As we ar Japanese p thoughts, lik other deleg: you. You 3 spirit for ti tions and th tudes. All |} Your great and peace, tl here would tainable.” The. three boycotted the in the gilt-a rium of the W House where post-war obst the United Ne ing six years Last An hour Db opened, Mr. G a press confer against the Polish and Cz lites "had ma day peace pai It was the blast at a co rendered his denying vet privileges. The treaty © and six days a capitulated ab Missouri in one-legged F Marou Shigem render Sept. & The treaty t Japan by Prir Yoshida, the vear-old stats Japan throug! pation years. ment of his a pan through f The treaty
. pressively sim
which began Indianapolis nent Chairm! called the con
Fir
First signer Paz, Argentir the United § across the gi bedecked sta house to sign lying on a ta podium. Rep: other, nations alphabetical o Signing for were Mr. Acl John Foster the treaty, months of ne other nations J. Sparkman | ander Wiley ( of the Senate Committee. After Viet the alphabeti document, Mi forward to ad to the treaty country to the The treaty force, howevel by a majorit who were ma the war again Little '
These includ Australia, C France, Indor lands, New The Philippin Kingdom. Russia also
~4ncluded. in .t
signed the tre and Burma h: invitation to ence, In most ca expected with In Indonesia, crisis was pr country's last sign. A dispa said the Ind may rebel at The treaty some misgivi tions. Delegat including Jar treaty during and many F[ items t w have seen ‘cha the only na speak. ° The Philipp two of the nat most grivious the Japanese, reparations. Want Australia wanted st against a rest
“militarism. TI
ing the treat) fense pact wit signed last S: It laid the c cific defense
Adve
GINGER
Ginger Rogers signed for .to
