Indianapolis Times, Volume 42, Number 149, Indianapolis, Marion County, 31 October 1930 — Page 2
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GEN. PAHGALOS HELD AS GREEK REVOLT_ CHIEF Government Leaders Say Ex-Dictator Sought to Regain Power. Mu Vmted Prete ATHENS, Oct. 31.—Arrest of General Theodoras Pangalos, former dictator, and of thirty of his followers, was believed to have checked what authorities call an attempt to overthrow the Greek government today. General Pangalos was arrested Thursday while Premier Eleutherios Venizelos was in Angora for the signing of accords of friendship and naval parity between Greece and Turkey. Officials said that General Pangalos and his colleagues took advantage of the absence of the premier to push their plan for the overthrow of his government. The friendship of Venizelos for Turkey was believed to have been the excuse of the Pangalos faction for its alleged attempt to seize power. Supporters of the former dictator appeared encouraged by a slight public reaction against the policy of Greco-Turkish rapprochement. General Pangalos dissolved the national assembly and expelled his predecessors in the Greek government when he became dictator of the country in an armed coup in September, 1925. He announced that he would give Greece a “pure administration’’ and hold elections for anew general assembly, but after no elections had been called during several months of his dictatorship, he was overthrown by an armed revolt and fled from Greece. SCHOOL TO HOLD PARTY Halloween Fete Scheduled at Indiana Central Tonight. An all-school Halloween party will be given by Christian Associations of Indiana Central college in New Hall at the college tonight. Committees in charge of the affair, that will attract three hundred students and faculty members, are Delmer Huppert, Y. M. C. A. president, and Miss Beatrice Young, Y. W. C. A. president Newcastle Girl Wins Mu United Prete BLOOMINGTON, Ind., Oct. 31. Miss Lillian Decker, Newcastle, a eenior at Indiana university, is the author of the winning manuscript for the 1931 edition of the “Jordan River Revue.” She will receive SSO.
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A feminine flying invader from Britain, smiling Mrs. Keith Miller is pictured above as she emerged from the cabin of her little monoplane at Curtiss field. L. 1., at the end of a two-way record flight across the continent. She had traveled from Los Angeles to New York in 21 hours 47 minutes’ flying time and previously had made the westward hop between the two cities in 25 hours 44 minutes. Both flights broke the records held by Laura Ingalls.
CHECK QUAKE’S TOLL / ■ Thirteen Are Known Dead in Italian Tragedy. Bu United Frees ROME, Oct. 31.—Thirteen persons were killed in the earthquake which occurred along the northern Adriatic coast Thursday, according to official reports received here today. The number of injured had not been determined definitely, but it was believed that it would total several hundred. There was considerable property damage throughout the district. Senigallia suffered most from the quake. Ten parsons were killed there. Three were killed in Ancona. Hundreds of residences collapsed or were badly damaged in the quake area. Fire Damages Frat House Bu United Press BLOOMINGTON, Ind., Oct. 31. Members of Sigma Nu fraternity, Indiana university, were routed from the chapter house when fire broke out. Damage of $2,000 resulted.
CRIME SWEEPS EUROPE, IN GRIP OF HARD TIMES Lawlessness Wave Has No Parallel in Recent Years, Say Police. 3u United Press LONDON, Oct. 31.—A crime wave, which police officials say has no parallel in recent years, is sweeping England and the continent in the wake of the economic depression. Unemployment, bankruptcy, and the collapse of banks and private firms have brought great disregard of law and order. Twelve murders remain unsolved on the blotter of Scotland Yard. A few years ago there were seldom more than two or three murders under investigation at any time. Most of the recent murders have been particularly brutal and have had robbery as the motive, showing the extremes to which people have gone to obtain money. England was startled a few weeks ago by the first bombing attempt in many years. Four postal workers were injured when the bomb exploded prematurely in a van at the central postoffice in London. The van contained mail for Buckingham palace, the government offices in Whitehall and the homes of prominent Englishmen. Another sensational feature of the economic stringency in England has been the large number of suicides and death-pacts. On the continent the wave of
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THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
lawlessness has culminated in a revulsion against parliamentary government. Six million Germans voted for the Fascist party in the general election knowing the Fascists were opposed to the Republican constitution. Political murders and anti-Jewis:i outbreaks, such as have always occurred in Europe in times of economic unrest, have followed the election. Pressure upon business houses and banks, as in England, has been the cause of many suicides. Two wealthy Germans recently ended their lives by jumping from airplanes in flight. The fall in the value of the peseta has been accompanied in Spain by strikes and general lawlessness. In Barcelona the struggle between two big secret unions has been
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similar in many way* to gang warfare. Men have been “put on the spot” and "taken for a ride,” and police have been attacked in the streets. MAN’S EFFORTS FUTILE Blasts to Halt Hurricanes Held Foolish by Scientist. MIAMI, Fla., Oct. 3J.— Richard W. Gray, government meteorologist here, asked to comment on ’’shooting hurricanes” to dispel danger from them, said: “All the explosives in the world, fired into a hurricane, would have as little effect as a boy shooting it with a beanshooter. People fail to realize there are outside forces which cause storms.”
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PAVING, SEWERS CONTRACTS LET New Projects Ordered by Board to Cost $6,400. Board of works this week let contracts for improvement work at an estimated cost of $6,400. Two of the projects are to be completed in sixty days and the third to be started and finished at the direction of A. H. Moore, city engineer. They are: St. Paul street, from
Woodlawn avenue to Prospect street, paving, Abel Brothers. $2,878, to be directed by Moore; School street, from Thirty-eighth street to a point thirty-four feet north of Thirtysixth street, Columbia Construction Company, $2,082, local sewer, and Arthington boulevard, from Thirtyeighth to Thirty-seventh streets, Columbia Construction Company, $1,427, local sewer. Resolutions adopted: Opening of Plymouth avenue, f rom first alley west of Belle Vieu r 1 ce, to second alley west of Belle Vieu; improvement of Baltimore avenue, from Forty-
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second to Forty-sixth streets; improvement of alley west at Arsenal avenue, from Thirty-second to Thirty-third streets, and alley east of East street, from Raymond street to Le Grande avenue. A1 Smith to Get Degree B !/ United Press DUBLIN, Oct. 31—The honorary degree of doctor of law ia to be conferred upon former Governor Alfred E. Smith of New York by the National University of Ireland.
