Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 30 January 1952 — Page 3
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30, 1952
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WEDNESDAY, JAN. 30, 1952 -
eS. To Fight Firm's Charge That Its Labor
VICKIE TELLS — Four-year-old ‘Vickie Kader talls District Attorney John B. McCourt in Portland, Ore., how her mother took her 3-year-old sister, Sherrie, to a secluded spot where her mother held her hand over
Sherrie's mouth until she "sent to sleep." She said her mother ‘then dropped Sherrie into a sump hole. The. mother, Mrs. Jada Z. Kader, faces a first de-
gree murder charge.
12 Unhurt as B- 36
Smacks Into Snowbank SPOKANE. Wash, Jan. 30
(UP)—A giant 3-36 bomber, coming in for a landing, smacked into a snowbank, burst into flames and skidded to a halt last night at Fairchild ‘Air Force Base.
None of the 12 persons aboard the six-engine heavy bomber was injured, base officials said Officers said. they could not immediately estimate the extent of damage to the $5 million craft, nor was the cause of the crackup determined.
Find 17th Fire Victim MINNEAPOLIS, Minn., Jan. 30 (UP) — Firemen today recovered the 17th body from the blackened ruing of a buwed-out tenement. The original death toll was set at 17. The dead included 12 children. four women and one man.
FIRST
OF
ALL
a restaurant should be a place where good food is served. When that food is served with beautiful surroundings, you have an unusual restaurant. ‘When good food, good pleasant atmosphere are combined at
have the
quiet: efficiency in
service, and. a
popular prices, you
Wrangle Over Award
. Of Contract =. =
A a Ay : . Ey Lo i ol
THE. INDIANAPOLIS* TIN ES
PAGE 3
as ‘Pirated’
# Subtract line 4 from line 3
Enter difference here. -
———anneuw o
Lines §, Ee ; fe Folks Around Marietfa leas Rama
6. Use the tax rates shown 1 Instructions to gure your tentative tax on amount § artially tax-exempt interest, see Instructions) TY Boe 6 1s (a) not over $400, enter 17% of amount on line 6... (4) over $400 but not over $100,000, enter § $68 plus 129 S over $100,000, enter $12,020 plus 9 75% Enter the difference here,
hown 1n line 5 (if line 3, above@includes
“Tce 0O-Rama are set tor
Enter the tentative tax here...
of the excess over $400.
o-of the excess over $100,000. .° * Thus 1 18 your combrhed “normal tax and surtax
oe, - ime’
v By United Pre Lines 910 13 should be filled In ONLY I hs J Jolt roturn of hush nd wie $ By JIM HEYROCK We moved in wityy friends who the Fair Grounds Coliseum Saty Tess . ————————————. | s— 5 : 9. Enter here one-half of amount of ine $, above . i > oar '"o > f the lived well above th® flood area. yrdav and 8 ‘ LOS ANGELES, Jan. 30—GOV- 10. Use the tax rates shown in Instructions to figure yolir tentative fax Ob amount shown In line 90 line 3, above, indies { $ Seams aii desea If the pe ty pe opis of ihe Three families 4 ad 4 Yes h i . and 4 unday: le: ernment wit 8 / : ted artially tax-exempt interest, see Instructions). Enter the tentative tax bere. . . waemssantronnasn . a Ohio Valley, the "disastrous € ; £8 wha A Lk aay Here is the schedule : ny, nesses were expected, i; yfline 10 is (a) not over $400, enter 17% of amount on line 10 { flood” currently’ making head- moved in ahead of us. Grocers Saturday, 8 a. m.—Rehearsals
{to testify today against a cen-
(4) over $400 bur not over $100,000, enter $68 plus 12% of the excess over $400.
had . set. up: their emergency
Nobody
of the excess over $100,000. ....0 oes ret lines is only a near-annual hap- or all ages through 12 years oid
(¢) over $100,000, enter $12,020 plus 9.75% 7 : BR rhe ye . (tractor who_ charged that his Carr) mi 10 Hs REE ee dea naa me tp sa A pening that has failed to dampen Stores on higher ground who signed up last Saturday and workers at a Nevada atomic test| 13 Multiply amount en line 12 by 2. Enter thes tax here. This it your combing ngrmal tax and SUTTAX. foo euua I$ ee |= their lives in past years. Seerved Mo We I additional tryouts of the same . aie ente: bd mem re———_—————rar———— | ‘ Phev Chic rate ‘or Fowboat rides, and at night ers » group who missed last week- $ ’ Api " ; s : o le D $ They call it “high water For C : f E age grouj site were “pirated” by a'cost-plus| J4_If alternative tax computation is ade on separate Schedule D, enter here tax from line 12 on back of Schapiie D.... CE = 0 years .the quiet little ‘comniunity Were community sings and lots end jcompetitor who offered wages as THE GIMMICK L k h 3 btr + d of Marietta, O., which has be- of laughs. Sunday, 5:15 Pp. Im--Renearsiis [high as $756 a week. / —Look what is su acted. Lsenter of the When the water Went down, we, for those 13 years old through
Bruce W. NcNeil, head of the
come the current
flood. have watched each spring Shoveled out the thick river mud, high school grades .who signed
{ McNeil Contracting Co., Los vv : : ’ as the Ohio River rises” the Washed the walls and floors and yp jast Sunday and tryouts for | Angeles, is protesting the govern-| ax iImmi S ONQ=—— Frost Old Muskingum River blocks up, and moved the furniture back in those of the same age groups {ment’s action in canceling a . . muddy waters swirl through place. ; , who missed "last Sunday. $617, 000. contract awarded him, =. eo ‘ their stores and kitchens. 3 yas just another “high The Saturday group will enter for constructing a concrete build-| Nn OW ou ISS t anuary And before the rivers settle water Se J . the Coliseum on the north side {ing at the Frenchman's Flat back within their banks each The people dont ng you and the Sunday group will enter ic ro "lz ~ needn't worry abou em. £)y po : : ic s § . 8 > ¥Y the south side. om test range near Las By DAVE WATSON cent reduction was allowed in- +4 year, the people are back doing don't A vs h K 1 4 egas. 3 i : ; . business at the same old stand Skaters .who see solo an HIS is the story of a gim- stead of the 17 per cent per- a ———————— rt { The contract was voided when : = . specialty parts in the Ice-O-Rama Mr. McNeil's fi : mick. mitted in 1949. January's bark is worse than Fail to Give Answer . . chould _ telephone Art Wright ‘ eil's firm failed to com- immick is something that Xt . Bite . wa . Hurt in Cage Practice houl ne A N plete the job in the ‘alloted time,| . A BMRIMUK 13 SOFERCE the THE 13 PER CENT disap- 'tS PR Weatheri, Those Who: live in sections of Times Public Service Eureay, but the contractor said he was Joes Somenung > Otaer mags peared altogether this year, and Boe today, Wg fhe. Ie : Ji the country untouched by floods,, A basketball practice session PLaza 5351, to arrange appoint~ unable / al A srensed ureau predicted. a ‘0 “HP with the exception of occasional ge . x . i 3 ints for trvouts. Ne o£ rye because 3 Things like ‘raising ‘income the tax rate was in Feased 2 But the Arctic invader switched is ig prozien ee to sent a, 16-year-old Indianapoli ig aD Rams which ane ’ Slee combelitor uisrupled) taxes and extracting dollars per cent to boot The result to cream puffs, coming in with a’ °° ee rae youth to General Hospital last s . : the labor ‘market. tr lae . : meant a 19 per cent tax in- . why the residents of towns such : _Inually raises money for charity painlessly from the purse. ‘rease for John Q "| mild low of $ above. las Marietta continue to live Night with a broken arm. He is ,,., 0h low, bargain admission Government's Explanation This gimmick might well be | CT7EUs TOF JOPR @- Like all this month, when cyl. 0 he river.” Charles F. Spurrier, 1363 W. 27th! prices the public pays for tickets Sovers 5 entitled “reducing ‘the reduc- 1at 2 per cent appeared be- |, io thawed before - reaching) 9.0N% : y i : prices 2 d i nt sovernment witnesses Were i...» pecause that’s what hap- cause tax rates were. raised | o. with January ending to- They'll never have an answer, gt hurt in the Riverside Park will be staged Thursday night, called to explain the Atomic pened on vour tax form. And about 11 per cent effective last TrOW its temperature tecoid $0 Apparently they've never consid "Methodist o hurch gym. Mar. 13. in the Coliseum.
Energy Commission’s stand that
it's costing you money.
just ac move out,
ered the question. They the floods,
Nov. 1. so applied only to No- far has been about 7: degrees clean
vember and December’ for the taxes John Q. is now paying. Next year the full force of the 11 per cent increase of last November will be felt, and that means taxes will have climbed
It all goes back to the tax year of 1949. when John Q. Public yelped with joy because more his. taxes were reduced. At that time there were two lines on the tax form (1040), which
Mr. McNeil’s firm could have completed the. project on time if he had offered his overtime. Mr. McNeil testified at the AEC
workers
hearing yesterday that the Build- allowed John Q. to reduce the 24 per cent from 1949. ing .was 86 per cent complete amount for which he could be And that is the story of a when the government terminated taxed gimmick his contract and gave the job to, It stops this year Wecause It did something to someone. Haddock Engineers, Ltd. which those two lines are no longer Guess who.
was operating on a cost-plus-fee on the tax form and John ,Q.
Open ‘Bids Tomorrow .
contract, cannot reduce the amount. So He said the .Haddock firm's he pays more to Uncle Sam, For New IU Building contract enab. i y “pidicty- : : CR a". - leh Bay roy TO THROW a little more RLOOMINGTON. Jan. 30 (UP)
light on the gimmick let's grab a figure out of the air and say John Q. had $2000 of taxable income after all his deductions were” taken, When all the figuring. was done the result was called the “tentative tax.” On $2000 that amounted to $400. In 1949 the gimmick line allowed John Q. to subtract 17 per cent of the $400 “tentative” tax. It was a flat $68 rebate. His actual tax was then $332. In 1950 the gimmick line allowed him to subtract 13 per cent. His actual tax on the
Bids for construc tion of a multimillion dollar life-science building for Indiana University will be opened tomorrow, university officials said today. The: state budget committee has set aside $3,428,571 for the project, the first major classroom structure to be built here since before World War II. It will house the departments of zoology, bacteriology and botany.
tracted McNeil company workers. One plumber earned $756 in one week with the Haddock company, Mr. McNeil said, and a cement foreman was paid $641.18 for a week's work. Haddock carpenters earned up to $325 weekly and laborers up to $219, he charged. Cement Foreman W. L. Reddock earned an average of $141 weekly while working for the McNeil company, the contractor said, but when he went to work for the Haddock firm, his weekly pay jumped to an average of $493.
’ $2000 that year was $348, a $52 . . . : . N d M | cut from the $400 ‘tentative’ Ch a t Driv WwW r i a i but above all else you Il | figure. es e a - [tone ame anager | gure this year the lines are no some of those. hit first. i want d ’ Of IU Food Unit | longer there. The ‘tentative’ The 27th annual “honored mem- Flood Business Area | ” : | tax is not chopped down by the ber” award of the «Indianapolis : : ; i Times State Service ' rebate. Tax on the same $2000 Community Chest today went to The water rose fast that year, | BLOOMINGTON, Jan. 30—/ is $408. And next year it's go- Philip Adler Jr. president of and the business district went Raymond Dault, hotel adminis-| ing to be worse. It will amount American Hosiery Mills, long ac- under first. You could watch the ® tration graduate of Michigan to $444 then. tive in Red Feafher cantpaigns. water rise. When n was obvious | State College, will manage the ; $'¥ 2 Mr. Adler was honored for “out- the water wouldn't stop soon, For Dobbs—has a sense of line— new student union and food serv-' AND THE wonderful part of 4, ,4ing and unselfish service in the merchants began to move a sense?of proportion—a sense of balance ice building at Indiana Univer- A gimmick is that John Q. can't out, my dad included. We lugged
; ; the public welfare” today at the 3 | tell What hit him unless he filed 32d annual luncheon meeting eof
in his memory -book the details . the Chest in the Claypool Hotel. hic forms for the last three = ng. Adler shared the spotlight Pa x with Bishop Richard® C. Raines Between 1949 and 1953 Mr. of the Methodist Church, the main
John Q. will bend under a tax i : speaker who reported on his reload which will have climbed cent world tour.
28 per cent, "whether President
sity Medical Center in Indianapolis. IU trustees today announced the appointment of the Muske-
NM : - 4 3 ig ye Ha Truman gets his proposed in- . Tribute to Service sistant manager crease or not. In - presenting the “honored
The break down goes this. After taxes were reduced in | 1949 the rebate section: was withdrawn, effective Oct. 1, 1950. That meant the reductions could be applied to only |
like member” award to Mr. Adler, Jeremiah Cadick paid tribute to his long and varied. serviee to the Community Chest, serving in almost every capacity from campaign solicitor to vice president. Mr. Cadick pointed out Mr. {Adler also had been active in many other community welfare activities, Summarizing his world mission| tour, Bishop Raines expressed! confidence God would use America to win the world back to free-
of the union on the University’s campus here.
Mr. Dault
The IU Medical Center build: ing, now under construction, 15 three fourths of the 1950 tax
{being financed through self-| year liquidating bonds and federal and| ~ The result w state funds, It will provide food | e5ulé was that a 13 per service for students, staff and| patients at the center, which now serves more than a million
LITTLE LIZ
y NE] meals annually, ob dom and peace. “As wrong as we are and as Mail Box Is Not Bank, weak as we are.” -he said, “there
is more right in America. more loyalty, more strength, than any place in the world.” “Have Faith in God” About Korea, the bishop declared: bp “We're already in a war, This The girl who con set a mon is no police action, but a struggle! o-quiver shouldn't have much dif- (on a world-wide scale. We've got| ficulty shaking him down. ewm to understand democracy and be
Post Office Rules
Post Office officials returned $46 to a maid today who left it inside a rental mailbox because she felt it was as safe there as in a bank safety deposit box. “I wanted to hide it from my husband,” she said, “so I rented the lock box.”
—
.
ou.
It's difficelt—almost impossible—to park your car in the downtown district. When you do, it costs an average of $.50 to $1.00 per day, or keeps you oa the run refilling the parking meter (a traffic violation, in itself.)
Too, AAA estimates you pay 8'4 cents for each miile you drive yoyr car. Take pencil and paper and figure your costs. It's cheaper to go by modern bus or trolley!You'll be Dollars ahead each month because — A Round trip by bus or wolley is only 25 ceats.
Like January of . Es ces NE ia Seer ve Ca vious years. In 1951 the mercury The’ first 17 years of my lif¢ STRAUSS SAYS: { Dy na nF , ~~» were spent in a home some five laverage was 2.5 degrees abov ® block the riv My 1 normal. in 1050 it was 9.9" above, |Dlocks: from the river. My Ia.
low of 17 tonight will be followed {by smidgeons of thigh of 42 tomorrow
Philip Adler Jr. Wins
cept
i re normal. . : Above nory {he three pre- uP. and move back in.
and 6.7 in 1949 ther’s business was in the heart B: é 7 949. X
The last “old-fashioned” Janu- of the downtown district, one of ary were 6.3 degrees below the first hit by floods. 3 normal Actually, “high water” time + as f the year's gayest A sonth wiil end mild. A{ M25 one Of : Ard the mH : times. A family row boat and a
pair of hip boots for every member of the family are necessary items of life in Marietta, the little college town of: 20,000. In Marietta, a boy changes into a man when his dad gives him his first pair of hip boots, usuaily long before he's had his first pair of -long pants. The people have followed the same pattern for generations in Marietta at high water time, The people in lower areas move to the homes on higher ground. Nobody refuses to take in a family “the
sunshine and The current cold snap and clear skies have reduced flood dangers in southern Indiana. Crests of the White and Wabash Rivers were dropping as they moved south, and the weather bureau said - flooding was ‘only moderate” and in lowlands Also. reduced were ‘threats of heavy floods due along the Ohio River late this and early next week. Crest forecasts were cut 2 to 3 feet as the floodwaters : Y headed toward southern Indiana high water's caught up with. from Ohio. The last “big” flood 1 remem- - = — ber was in 1937. It came in April. {This year's is a little ahead of schedule.) L.ong before our front vard,
THIS SPRING you'll want a hat with a bit narrower brim—
the water reached
schools were dis-
—a mastery in Felting—that puts these Hats ahead among careful men! There ‘are new Shades— (among them ALPINE}— there are new Blocks— featuring the tapered crown— There are experienced hatters—whe "custom-fit'' the hat—to your face, your profile—your nl architecture— your taste. 7
equipment to a higher floor and {left both doors open.
About the time the last piece {was moved out, the water began {to seep in on the floor. An hour, later we were wading in twol |inches of water. | | By that time, “chocolate wa-| ter” was licking the shrubbery | laround our front porch at home. We tied our rowboat to the front
iporch and began moving the fur- | ; Doh 27 heen Mowing | Dobbs Hats are 8.50 for the | Cross County—
Within two hours, the furni-| ture was moved off the first At $10—12.50—$15—and $20 are specialized selections—
{floor, stoves were disconnected, electricity was turned off and we At $40 there is a DeLuxe Beaver.
HONORED—Philip Adler Jr.
it and have faith |God, if we are to win.”
loyal to in had set up housekeeping on the {second floor, with an oil stove In making his annual report for cooking. G. R. Redding, Community Chest] But that year, the water kept president, paid tribute to William coming and within a day or two| J. Stout, chairman of the cam- We could see it was going to dunk paign held last fall the second floor
s . We moved the : 3 “Fas . . the attic, climbed — H i vear terms in- into the rowboat and headed for kas .
New directors of the Chest furniture to board elected for 3 cluded: 8S. Paul Clay Jr. Otto N. higher ground. Frenzel, Edwin G. Plum, Roy,’ sp Sahm, Mr. Stout, Clark 8S. . rover | ’ ‘heeler, Mrs. John K. Gogdwin,!| STRAUSS SAYS: TRADITION WITH A TOUCH OF TOMORROW Liebert Mossler and Eugene 8S.
Pulliam. Hammond, Ind., Wins ‘Cleanest City’ Nod
: rs Ae x od Times Special | J : er a. OR Be ———— WASHINGTON, Jan. 30—Ham-| > - initio | mond, Ind., amid the vast, smoky : % a 2 : { industrial Calumet - area, today a 3 ie was named America's cleanest of - Gi A a a ly }
«to eet ie ee
city for its population group. The National Paint, Varnish and Lacquer Association cited the Hoosier city as outstanding in the 50,000 to . 100,000 population
group. Dearborn, .. Mich., was » runner-up, Philadelphia and Memph.s
jointly were given the Ernest T K. Trigg award as the nation's cleanest cities in all population | groups. :
Count 30 Dead in Storm
SYDNEY, Australia, Jan, 30 (UP) — The hurricane which /f wrecked Suva, capital of the Fiji iF Islands, killed at least 30 persons (2 and injured 200, it was reported i today. Most of the wictimk were a said to have been Indians and Fijians. : -
YOU MAY
LOOK AT THIS SOLE!
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Palomino Tan
Bi Cordo Brown Lat and : : det
Blue Suede — It's a value—that will walk right out—double o quickl
L. STRAUSS & 00, I. THE MANS STORE ~~
A NEW
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REGISTER AT YOUR ’ INDIANAPOLIS 4 FORD DEALER 7
FEB. 1st 2nd. a
YOU NEED NOT BE PRESENT AT DRAWING * TOWN
Gomme
