Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 21 January 1952 — Page 3
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. MONDAY, JAN. 21, fo57 _ .
THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
~ Indiana’s Tax Collections Top *242 Million
All-Time ‘Record Set During '51
Figures Tell the Story Truce Talks
of Frank Millis; state auditor, and Cenn J. Sterling, director: of the state revenue department.
A new all-time high tidal wave!
two subcommittees today that it will not yield on the two main fssues blocking an armistice—
of Tiors than S20 or ! Tax (or fees) : 1950 1951 _ Increase taxes Poured at thon sale Gross Income . $ 7367522230 $ 89,514,797.)5 $15,839,574.85 Br United Press fo toausd IDO i YOBICT Banus... eerirsererns 21,716,560.61 30,484,47128 ~~ 8767.910.67 Snir ryat .. EI TY 0 1051, as75 was) Sling’ Lo SL, 4658263585 5013341800 ~~ 355078215 PANMUNJOM, Korea, Jan. more than $30 ioe pus Alo License .....sveveie 23,809,169.96 2458328257 ~~ 77411261 21 — Korean armistice talks pore that 5 lon higher than Alcoholic beverage ...... 16,821,382 11 16,911,743.92 WITH od to Fave reached a Le Jrevious record collection of' Cigaret ....:.%.....u re 1282000463 1317212962" 35203499 Appeared ve rear $212.104,126.11 in 1950. Praperty ,......c0.e000.0 BTA9317.08 9,132,955.14 18313806 dead-end today, - with both The state's unappropriated sur-! Intangibles’ ............. 3,031,310.05 3,308,676 89, 277,366.84 sides refusing to budge. plus—once considered seriously! Inheritance ........, ees 2,965,843 50 _3,064,881.83 99,038.33 Oniv 3 . alicy eh ww threatened by increased state Store Licenses ....: ieee 53489425 555,585.00 E3073 1p, Do AOE DT spending —actually vaulted more| Oil Inspection .......... 107967994 1,158,579.31 TEEN) | Ee RO hs Bratire es than $17 million during the year.| Petroleum : Severance ..... ® 29751583 301,056.08 354035 [UNISLE CRN the net Cael: ae peginaing 31 the Employment Agencies .... Nene 1,450.00 1,450.00 From Rial cota pio 8 ; was 35,489,177.64. fr a . A ———— ————— 1 ws "year's end it was $52,650,344.26. | Totals $212,004,126.11 $242,32302679 $3021890068 Each side served notice in the
Has Officials Guessing ! — - — este me Whether this increase of tax Surplus (end of Year) .... 35,789,177.64 52,659,344 26 17,170,166.62 income will subside this year has — some state officials guessing and
d. B ex : $ * BH) ii igh py a Hoosier N U rse G U i des (UP)—The Communists should
Substantial jumps in collection start surrendering any day now
of wi a income, Bl . | judging by two replacements veterans bonus, gasolirié levies— 00 to o arri at this sector reaccounted for $28,158,267.68 or al- n INS ga iy suk sional most all th et increas rer soldiers assigne ; wi 1950 311 the -nei increase ove “A Hoosier nurse guides the “If people could just look in at te iers Resigned to duly in The gross income tax, as usual, flow of Indiana-donated blood the suffering and death in these be lee By BRLey vEmen oa Wit the largest single source ot into the veins of wounded GIs Army tent hospitals in Korea,” Sluder ans Be o au) Riot state revenue “Collections in 1951 at the Korean front. Lt. Schreiber Wrote her- mother, a d a I {st I is, Yolated OSL TCT LS Se Ghaton |" She knows ob Mrs. Arthur Schreiber, Caborn, 5 rew Jackson oi Si Lous, DOT JH, - - « - i .“" 2! { & >. tial $15,839.574.85 jump over the NOW important it Jud. ‘4hey'q surely open up their vi
Et. hearts . .."” : = -e pe = is. { ' y 1950 record A of Ng She has seen : She says morale is low because the United Nations demands for
a: E i jev voluntary repatriation of war en Notes fighting men “die fighting men believe most of the ) : ; gross income tax d vision director, pi g transfo. life. saving blood comes from prisoners and for a ban on mills 8 increase may be sion woild save their fellow GIs back in the itary airfield construction. misleading for two reasons: £ :
1 sna" $ 3S (ids who'll be A Communist newsman tover-| ag Yon their lives. states poor kids who'll soon J C S Bi oe De. She has heard fighting in Korea tiremselves. ing the truce talks told United] e delinquent taxes ected, Sik Ao a for previous years, $1,912,000 he- Others voice their
Nations correspondents that fullmy collected in the frst 11 d i scouragement scale Korean fighting is “sure to ? at the apparent
TWO: A new department drive lack of concern gi was begun in 1951 to get persons On the part of
WITH THE LU. §, 3D INFAN-. TRY DIVISION, Korea, Jan. 21
One-Woman Campaign
!ter arrived, Mrs. Schreiber 3tart- drops its airfield ban demand. ed a one-woman campaign for a4 the same time, the United NE i sioce i the folks Back Lt. Schreiber PISO for solvers, Nations denied a Te eto al role home, es, or Sil Sat i coast CBRtER. thal Allied Slgnes deli rc will Tal | She's with the 8029th Mobile 4 5 snc E 1 5 erately bombed and strafed a
“Just how significant the quarterly ‘payment factor is will be
Army Surgical Hospital, support-
.starte ight after she and her ; , ing the 77th Infantry Division. | rir iea Vig n delegation convoy on the Pyong-
{husband bade good-by to their yang Kaesong road last Friday, | determined by the collections for Both World War IT Veterans third child, Arthur, inducted into ° I the first quarter of 1952," Mr. Another Hoosier, Maj. Delzena the Navy. Joy Sees Need Propst explained. Garrard, sister of Mrs. George Lt. Schreiber formerly was : I “Many of the quarterly pay- Kish, 749 Sparrow Ave. Indian- public health nurse in Pike Coun- Of Pressure . | ments made for the first time apolis, is head nurse of the hos- ty. Later, she served three years - last year normally would have pital. Both are veterans of nurse in Deaconess Hospital, Evans-] WASHINGTON, Jan. 21 (UP) shown up in the first quarter of duty in World War II. {ville, as supervisor of obstetrics. |—Vice Adm. C. Turner Joy, chief this year if paid on an annual (United Nations truce negotiator, | basis.” |suggested today that increased |
The state bonus tax showed a Dan Smith Tries Shake {military pressure may be needed |
whopping $8,767.910.68 increase to [to stop Communist stalling over
a total of $30484471.28. This ego |a Korean armistice. raises the total amount es Meadache From Fugitives Adm. Joy said there are only to $57.3 million—roughly half of > : two possible ways to bring a defi-| what is expected to be needed to. Marion County Sheriff Dan turn after a conference with her nite showdown in the truce talks: pay all eligible World War 1I vet- Smith still is having headaches minister. “Either a sudden voluntary erans. : with his prodigal feminine pris- But today. the sheriff sent the change of heart on the part of | Mr. Propst says a comparison oners girl with one of his: deputies t0 {he Communists, or the applica-| of 1951 and 1950 bonus tax col- : Cincinnati to find a pawn shop {j,n of sufficient military power lections would be misleading. The Both the prisoners who took where - the girl said she had ;, jnquce such a change of 1050 collections, he points out, French leave from his bastille ‘hocked” jewelry valued at $98 Beart.” : represent tax only on the last over Christmas have since re- which the prodigal prisoners t00K «After more than six months half of the 1949 income, Also, the turned to the fold. Sut that does with them when they escaped. | ¢ Yodiously frustrating negotia1051 receipts included the new n°! end Dan's woes. It seems the jewelry belonged tions I am sure that there must quarterly payments normally The second prodigal returned to one of the other prisoners. he a large number of people who showing up in the annual return. last night. She fs a 17-year-old valuables for which the sheriff is would heartily indorse blasting The gasoline tax (4 “cents a juvenile who escaped “with Mrs. responsible for safekeeping and the Communists off the Korean gallon) reflects increased use of Lissa Hanson, the elusive babe of he wants it back. cars and trucks during the past bouncy check fame. He’s also interested in discrep- righted interview with the news vear. An equivalent increase this| The girl was persuaded to re- ancies in the escape stories told magazine U. 8. News and World year is not expected. But few see, by the two. | Report. any substantial reduction in the In her Jan. 10 statement, Lissa |
tax ‘Unwelcome Guest said she left the jail with only $5. Fierce Red Fire Turns
Over 1.2 Billion Gallons . {The girl told the sheriff Lissa! : : The 1951 gasoline tax collection Plagues Family; |had more than $200 when they Back Allied: Raiders represents purchase of 1,253,335,- h | {took a cab to Terre Haute after, EIGHTH ARMY HEADQUAR450 gallons of gasoline, not count- It Has 4 w eeis their escape. TERS, Korea, Jan. 21 (UP)— ing the nontaxable gasoline pur-\ po onvrrr Em Ind, Jan, 21 Meanwhile, juvenile authorities Fierce Communist fire forced back chased for non-highway use. (UP)—Mr. and Mrs. John Stur- here stepped up disposition of the United Nations raiders on the The 3-cent-a-package cigaret geon hoped today they can soon Sir! Who had been held 47 days in|western front today. tax netted Indiana a total of “0 = or welcome guest from the jail—without trial or hearing| On the eastern front, United $13,172,120.62 last year. TRIS yp 0 1ivino room—an automobile —before her escape. {Nations patrols fought four en-| represents 439,070,987 packages o,.1 rammed into the house in| Charles Boswell, chief juvenile [§agements with Communist units of cigarets purchased in Indiana... .ijent three months ago to-| probation officer, said the girl/in bunkers west of the Mundung| One significant phase of Indi-|g,." |was being held for a psychologi- | Valley. ana’s tax collection program Will "v4 (ct. 21 the car crashed cal examination before being, Bad weather receive increased emphasis this nt; the house and stopped half committed to the Girls School for activity. year. Bi pe campaign jn and half out of the parlor. delinquency. against tax chiselers. Driver Edward R. Gray's ankle 3 ; . . A special fraud section is being aq proken. : Wai gn hg Reilly Estate organized in the gross income tax " J s
The house was jolted dff its keeping after having previously : division to handle all delinquent foundation, hut ‘the Sturgeons. ryn away from Ah juvenile Estimated at
tax accounts where there is sus- who were asleep at the time i : fhe ; | = institutions and ste R picion of deliberate attempt to were not injured. $ foster homes $1.15 Million
evade the taxes. Hire Extra Help The state budget bureau recently authorized the hiring of "go iar. n ¢ 8 , negotiations have prog- * a EE ressed slowly.. The car hasn't been State Police moved an inch. The Sturgeons . from March 1 to June 30. !moved into their other rooms and Win 70 MPH closed off the living room, which
hampered air
re. They got a writ of attachment = 4 hoa0ine is scheduled in Ju-| Peter C. Reilly, prominent jon the car while negotiating with opie Court tomorrow afternoon. industrialist “and philanthropist the owner ‘for damages to the teins rie "who died Jan. 4, left an estate house, estimated at $1.15 million. Mr. Reilly, 82-year-old founder and president of the Reilly Tar & Chemical Corp., left no will, {according to a report filed in pro{bate court today. { A son, Thomas E., and the Two youthful speeders had a Indiana National Bank were ap“yr. head start in the newest teen-age pointed co-administrators. Athighway racing game. Biit a state ‘torneys for the esgate are Ross, policeman, won the 70 mph race. McCord, Ice & Miller. IndianapBrought up in Speedway. Mag- Olis. and MacLish, Spray, Price istrate's Court today for “drag & Underwood, of Chicago.
\racing” were Dale Davison, 22, PRELIMINARY estimate *
of 5846 E. 16th St. and Gordon |the estate showed personal prop- { Harris, 18, of 6102 E. Ridge Drive. | opty of $1 million and real
(Both were found guilty of reck- ,. nerty of $150,000.
are not subject to the state gross Judge Rabb |less driving and fined $50 and |" pairs include the wife, Mrs. income tax, a good portion of} . costs and 10-day jall sentence yheya T, Reilly, 3134 N. Meridian Indiana’s income is not subject As Witness suspended. : . !St.; a daughter, Mrs. Ineva to the state tax. | | ’ Br 2 Frances Meyer, Madison, Wis, Mr. Propst’s report for 1951 Isaac (Tuffy) Mitchell's law-, SPEEDWAY JUDGE GEORGE and two other sons, Peter C. Jr, indicates that 48 per cent of the yers today subpenaed everybody OBER said the new teen thrill|New York City, and George A. total revenue of the state's 2000 —including Judge Saul I. Rabb| “drag race” consists of two cars| Chicago. largest industrial firms is in- and Prosecutor Frank Fairchild—|stopping abreast, then starting] During his lifetime Mr. Reilly volved in interstate commerce Who had anything to do withthe for an all-out race. gave $1 million to the University and hence not subject to the state Indiana Ave. kingpin's indictment| This race was just going into |of Notre Dame for ¢hemistry and tax. {Det 27 on eight gaming counts. the stretch on U. 8. 40 when the [chemical engineering. | A spectacular preliminary jury! cars ‘sped a Ind. 100 where| Although he shied away from ‘trial was promised Wednesday Patrolman Stanley Young swung public mention of his generosity, Attempt to Settle | when Tuffy's attorneys will try to into the race, g he contributed .to many other Strike of Monticello have the indictments thrown out.| “He got in late but he won the charitable and educational Indiana Labor Commissioner Judge Rabb, Criminal Court 2, race,” commented the judge. | projects. Thomas R. Hutson sent a de- apparently will play the double Sr - —— partment conciliator to Monti- role of jurist and defense witness. cello today where, he said, 300 $8 =» employees of the Bryan Manu-| ASKED whether this unusual facturing Co. are on strike. procedure would force him to Mr. Hutson said he was told disqualify himself, Judge Rabb the workers reported for the day said: 3 shift this morning as usual, but| “I don’t know — I don't know walked off the job a short time what they'll ask me to testify to.” later. He said that failure of the Also subpenaed were the six company to recognize a United grand jurors who indicted Tuffy Mine Workers union was the rea- |and three members of the proseson employees gave for striking.jcutor’s staff. - The company makes electrical Mr. Fairchild — also billed in . wiring assemblies. [Exo roles as prosecutor and -de~
fense witness—planned to file a LITTLE L112
Farmers particularly will come
under close scrutiny in 1952..4.4 heen swept by snow, rain and ‘Drag Race’ Total collections in gross income ying plowing in through the open-| tax in 1951 amounted to an jpg left hy the crash. average of $22.67 for each man, The Sturgeons live in a woman - and child in® Indiana. shaped lot between two highways. However, the average tax paid They said it wasn’t unusual for by farmers amounted only 10 cars to run into their yard and $16.93. Also many more farmers tear down their shrubbery. are paying federal income tax| BN than those reporting their in-
comes to the state division. Tuffy Calls
Since interstate transactions)
| NON-STOP 1 HOUR 41 MINUTES IS CES NEW Luss CONSTELLATIONS
Fastest to New Orleans, 4 hours 22 minutes! Non-stop to Detroit, only-66 minutes!
motion today to learn if there is any need for the trial at all. ! Should Judge Rabb rule in his |favor, the show would be off. § —————— .
| . . —————— . . A Rites Set Wednesday | FT. WAYNE, Jan. 21 (UP)=— = . Services will be conducted + |Wednesday for Mrs. Laura Noll | as iy Colling, widow of Wilfiam H. Noll, hy 2 +z»c (who founded the Pinex Cough =~ — Syrup Co. Mrs. Collins, vice pres-i. le witha lot of people [ident of the firm, left an estate seem to know .more estimated at several million doltheir rights thanabout their , lars. She died yesterday in St. © \ewa.' [Luke's Hospital at Chigggo.
>
|
i PHONE ie FR1554 © Yoh YEAR of PERFECT SAFETY
N13: V1: 0." 3
-When her daughter Alice's let- hegin” unless the United Nations:
Communist|the
\
peninsula,” he said in a copy-|
Hero Comes Home—
RETURNED WARRIOR—Sgqt. Fred Keers is happy to be home.
By LLOYD B. WALTON
The bitter, numbing cold of the Death = March’ .from Chosin Reservoir, nightmarish ambushes by the enemy on a narrow mountain road; a dash for life across
shell-pitted =ands of the beach at Hungnam. These memories will last for-
ing, telling what Alice wrote. She rqner)y marked Communist truce ever for Marine Sgt. Fred Keers.
There also is a big question in
{his mind.
Before he was wounded near Inje Sept. 24, after a year of fighting, he had noticed that a lot of American-made ammunition used by the enemy had a later date stamped on the casings than that used by our troops. How is that possible, he wonders.
But he is home now after tak-|
ing everything the enemy could throw at him. He's on leave from the Great Lakes Naval Hospital where he will return for further treatment. In March he will be discharged. Left in August, 1950 Sgt. Keers, who lives with his parents at 1215 N. Pennsylvania St., Apt. 309, left here with the 16th Marine Reserve Battalion in August, 1950. His .most vivid recollections of Korea are of the retreat from Chosin to Hungnam. Twentythree thousand Marines of the
compared win 303 accor bo ures compet oy mre otis S@@m to Head He’s Had His Share | For Dead End Of War—Here’s Why |
Bo
erous journey over narrow mountain roads. After 48 hours of traveling and ambushes, only] 12,000 came out under their own power, | *The road through the moun-|
tains was barely eight feet wide.|
The terrain was ideal for the sneak attacks of the enemy In the afternoon of the first day they met the first ambush. The, convoy kept moving and battered its way through. About disk of the same day the Communists blew up the road in front of the retreating Marines. While a fierce battle ensued the!
Marine engineers built a tempor-| ary bridge from pine trees, and|
the march continued.
Opened Heavy Fire The biggest ambush woccurred about midnight as they moved towards a small native village.
The enemy waited until the ad-
vance guard of the convoy was] near and then opened heavy, mortar fire. The first five trucks) ,Weré heavily damaged.
The remaining trucks offered
the only shelter, so the Marines] lay flat on the ground and re-|
turned the fire. This battle continued until 6 a. m. ) Twelve hours later the hattleweary Marines reached Hungnam and under cover. of darkness started - the. mad dash for free.
1st Division started the treach- dom across the beach to ships.
i PAGE 3
STRAUSS SAYS:
TRADITION WITH A TOUCH OF TOMORROW,
© am LJ
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