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Fimp P *2.22 *244 PAGE 6 THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES JAN. 5, It* STORY OF JOHN DILLINGER'S BOYHOOD IS TOLD BY THESE PHOTOS CITIZEN-OWNED' UTILITY PLANTS £ I SHOW PROFIT Municipal Light and Power . Plants in ’32 Made ' $212,542.10, Municipally owned utilities re- turned a net profit of $212,542.10 to Indiana towns where they operate and thus aided in keeping them I JEFTr JmmF^aaSg from borrowing from working bal- ances in 1932. This fact is set out in a report on town finances for that year made public today by William P. Cos- grove. ...... state examiner. It was pre- ' ' pared in his office by Albert E. Dickens, statistician. One hundred and forty-two civil towns operate ,waterworks, fifty- three electric plants and thirty both water and electric utilities, the re- port shows. In 1932. these utilities received 51.023.6C7.50 in operating revenues and disbursed 5811.065.40 for oper- ating and maintenance. Expenses Decrease In the total of 423 Indiana towns, the governmental cost for 1932 was $3,461,003.47, the reiiort shows. This was $593,623.52 or 14.6 per cent less than was expended in 1931. Tax re- ceipts were 26.4 per cent less, how- ever, being the lowest since 1922. CAPITOL They decreased 21.4 per cent from Suits, Topcoats, Overcoats 1 the previous year and were $253.- 1 006.39 less than disbursements, ne- cessitating inroads on working bal- ances to make up the deficiency in revenue. School functions were maintained in but eighty of the incorporated towns at a cost of $2,101,915. which was a decrease of 21.9 per cent from the previous year. Total for both civil and school purposes was $5,656,918.54. making the cost for the 423 towns about one- half the Indianapolis civil city ex- penditures for 1932. Population of Upper—the old grocery, operated by John Dilling- many outings when John Jr. was a boy. Second from the towns is 295,576, and that of er Sr. in Indianapolis, while John was a small boy. the right, he is seated next to the older sister, who Indianapolis, 364,161. in the John Jr. is seated wagon. took over the duty of mother to him. Costs Compared Center, —Young Dillinger is the lad right in left Lower—Dillinger the husky smil- the row. The other children are members of posed boyishly, Compilers of the data offered this second reign his family. ing kid that his friends knew before his terror comment: expenditures il- Center, right—The Dillinger family at one of thc-ir in the underworld. “These relative lustrate graphically the direct cor- relation existing between urbaniza- tion and governmental costs. With the concentration of a large popula- GRGSSART STILL IN Committee Will Study tion into a small area, governmental functions of necessity become com- plex and multitudinous, and hence CRITICAL CONDITION Unemployment Insurance public expenditures in large cities are many times as great as if the same population were diffused into County Auditor Is Reported Dr. R. Clyde White Elected Other members of the committee, small nucleated groups. Slightly not present, are Frederick C. Kro- “That the towns, both civil and Better. ger, Anderson, general manager of school, do not constitute an ap- Chairman of Social preciable factor in tax Condition of Charles A. Grossart. the Delco-Remy Company, repre- the burden, Marion county ill at his may further be understood from the auditor, Work Group. senting business; Superintendent home with threatened pneumonia fact that'the total tax receipts of and heart trouble, still is critical, Dr. R. Clyde White was elected Donald DuShane, Columbus, public these towns for 1932-33 amounted only to 2.07 per cent of although slightly improved, it was chairman of the committee on social schools; C. Oliver Holmes, Gary', le- the total reported today. taxes levied for all purposes for insurance of the Indiana stpte con- gal profession, and William H. Book, 1932.” Mr. Grossart was ordered to rest Wednesday several weeks ago, because of* a ference of social work at Indianapolis, social service. week heart, but refused. the committee’s first meeting in the office of the Indiana university bu- BARBERS DRAFT CODE GIRLS' eau of social research. FEDERATION Bombing in Chinese War It was determined to make a study NBA Schedule Will Not Be .Wade of legislative measures for unem- Public Until Approval. 10 SEAIOFFICERS m ployment insurance. Tentative price schedules and Is Newsreel Feature Members of the committee pres- workyag hours operative under the Third Christian Church ent were Alex E. Gordon, Indianap- NRA were drawn up by the Indian- olis, representing labor: E. R. Black- apolis barber shop owners at a mass Ceremony Arranged. - wood, Indianapolis, insurance. Mrs. Times Universal Picture meeting in Eagles hall, 43 East Ver- Candle light installation services Edwin F. Miller, Peru, Indiana Fed- mont street, last night. About 150 will be hedl at 9:30 Sunday morn- MKM * , Shows Revolutionary LIKENS EUROPE eration of Women's Clubs; Mrs. shop owners attended. The new ing at the Third Christian church for new officers of the Girls Neal Campbell, Indianapolis, League schedule will not be made public Federa- Force Rout. tion. Mrs. Ruth Book will sing. of Women Voters, and Dr. White, until it has been approved by code Graphic action pictures taken TO ANOLD MAN Officers to be installed are Miss university. Indiana authorities. Isabelle Small, aboard a National army bombing president; Mrs. Constance Stuckey, Miss Vera Kep- plane as ifr attacks revolutionary Upton Close Says Continent FESTIVAL OF KINGS IS OBSERVED HERE ple. Mrs. Elizabeth Thornburg, Miss For Men and Young Men MBt forces in revolt in Fukien Province, Hallie Racuglen, vice-presidents; China, and scenes of the infantry Miss Geneva Roberts, treasurer; Has Too Much Past and Miss Josephine Combs, frontier, are to assistant- battling along the No Future. treaurer; Miss Ruth Randolph, cor- be seen in the current issue of responding secretary; Miss Fr oo i The Times-Universal Newsreel. Gra- “Europe today is like a senile old Patton, recording secretary, and Misses ham McNamee, noted radio an- man—too much past and no fu- Mary Alice Randolph, Olive Magruder, Ruth Shr.be and Pauline nouncer and the screen’s talking re- ture.” Netherland. secretaries. porter, describes this and the other That was the statement of Upton Associate teachers are Mrs. Leila events in the reel. Close, newspaperman and an au- Rothenburger and Mrs. Curtis thority on Asia, made before a lines, Hodges. Miss Minnie Lloyd is assist- Flying over the front the Town Hall audience at English’s ant teacher. Universal newsreel cameraman ob- this noon. Members of the new council of the tained scenes of the fighting during He maintained it made no differ- federation will be entertained by the what hottest moments of the battle. ence to the future of America executive council at a dinner party the Europe does as “we are not going Friday night at the Silver Cup. The revolutionary forces, composed to get messed up with her again.” assortments are tremendous and into secret fimP of Communists opposed to the cen- “As England enters P tral government at Nanking, are negotiations with Japan, that is SPORTS CENTER BEING showered with shot and shell and vastly more important on our fu- DEVELOPED IN EAST suffer many casualties. ture than our negotiations with said. Other important news events in- England or Japan,” he Long Ski Jump, Skating Rink Are issue He declared that “our front door cluded in the current are Under Construction. scenes at Clatskanie, Ore., where now is the Pacific and not the By L'nitrd in an avalanche; the Atlantic” and that events to come Prrus four are killed WINSTED, Conn., Jan. 5—A new outbreak of a feud that results very soon around that front door new future winter sports center, will pro- in a pitched battle at Marshall, will shape the destiny of which driven high this nation. vide one of the finest ski hills in Ark.; views of a steamer the being beach by terrific storm at Mr. Close asserted that President country, is developed here, on a a he meet tentatively Astoria, Ore.; Indians working in Roosevelt was elected “because with the first set camp fooled the people by not telling for early January. the largest all-Indian CCC in A hill four miles United States; skaters on the them what he would do.” from Winsted, the and on a main paved Lincoln pool at Washing- “The President is telling you now highway, has memorial been jump. C.; novel ear con- what is going on in this country,” selected for the ski ton, D. a judges Backers of the venture say it will France; he said, and predicted that the peo- i test in Paris. Mrs. Alice be a Bridges setting anew United States ple are going to be divided cn the better test for the expert ski | men of this country and I record for the 200-meter backstroke question of going the entire way Europe Mussolini honoring him. than any other jump in the United : at Miami, Fla.; with States. farmers at the dedication of the He stated that the President, for It has a maximum length of 1,138 feet, and it will possi- City as an prov- diplomatic reason, can not tell us be , of Littoria Italian ble to jump 260 feet in safety. ! ince; an snow festival at what is on in the Pacific, but The unusual going width is 50 feet at the top 100 ' Innsbruck, Austria; two women he will by April of this year, or in and 237-hour endur- feet at the bottom, assuring both pilots ending their 1936 when treaties expire.
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