Indianapolis Times, Volume 44, Number 131, Indianapolis, Marion County, 11 October 1932 — Page 3
OCT. 11, 1932
CHARGE MORGAN CANNING PLANT IS KILLING FISH Practice Going On for Years, but Efforts to Halt It Have Failed. Charge that Ivan Morgan, Republican state chairman, permits his Austin canning factory to pollute •he Muscatatuck river, and kill the fish, was supported today by both state conservation and state health department officials. The practice has been going on for years, and all efforts to get Morgan to ‘become a co-operative citizen'’ have failed, it was said. At present anew survey of the stream is being made, and action against Morgan again may be attempted. The survey is being conducted .jointly by the health and conservation departments. History of the case, covering a period back to the passage of the stream pollution act by the 1927 legislature, was outlined today by Lewis S. Finch, director of the sanitary engineering division of the state health department. He related how a citizen brought suit against Morgan about three years ago. but a Brownstown judge declared the law unconstitutional Pleas came to the health and conservation departments that the river banks below Austin were lined with dead fish, poisoned by the refuse from Morgan's factory. "We went to investiate, but in the interim it rained and the dead fish were washed away,” Finch explained. “Now we are conducting the Muscatatuck survey and will have sufficient data to proceed in court, if the proper evidence is available. “There may be other offenders besides Morgan involved.” Failure to curb Morgan, who was a local G. O. P. power, before becoming state chairman through appointment by Senator James E. Watson, has been a source of constant, criticism from citizens interested in preserving Indiana's natural resources.
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S T A N D ARP OIL CD M P A N Y
Evangelists Meet as Disciples of Christ Gather for World Parley
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Clifford Jope
Asa preconvention feature of the international convention of the Disciples of Christ, which will start Wednesday, the national session of the National Evangelistic Association will open tonight at 7:30 at padle tabernacle. Total attendance of the sessions is expected to-reach 5.000. William J. Lockhart. Des Moines, will preside at tonight's session and a scriptural reading and prayer will be made by Hugh Kilgour, Toronto, Canada. Claude E. Hill, Tulsa, Okla., will speak on "The Creative Power of Evangelism.” Speakers at the Wednesday morning session of the Evangelistic Association will bp Clifford Jope, Washington, on "Evangelism We Need;” Charles Reign Scoville. Chieago, on "The Present Need for Evangelism;” Arthur Braden. Lexington, Ky„ on "The Place of Revivals in the Progress of the Church,” and A. W. Fortune, Lexington. Ky„ on "We Preach.” Wednesday's sessions will be held at the Central Christian church, Walnut and Delaware streets. Wednesday afternoon's program
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Homer W. Carpenter
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Jesse M. Bader
includes an address by R. E. Snodgrass, Pittsburgh, on "The Place and Power of Christian Song in Evangelism"; J. D. Boyd, Coffeyville, Kan., on "Evangelism Through Religious Education”; Patrick Henry, Ft. Worth. Tex., on "Co-opera-tion in the Evangelistic Task in
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Claude E. Hill
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The Rev. C. W. Cauble
Texas"; C. R. L. Vawter, Enid, Okla., on "Our Present Situation and the Evangelistic Meeting,” and John Wycliffe Black of Leicester. England, on "The Supremacy of Christ.”
‘REST BEER IN CITY,'IS CLAIM: FREE.SUSPECT Flaw in Search Warrant Brings Liberty to Alleged Canal Resort Operator. Because of a search warrant “discrepancy,” operators of an alleged exclusive beer resort on the bank of the canal north of Butler university, were freed today by Municipal Judge William H. Sheaffer. Sheaffer dismissed a blind tiger charge against Everett Johnson. 5340 Canal boulevard, alleged operator, after sustaining a defense motion to suppress evidence because a police search warrant incorrectly named the street on which the alleged resort is situated. Cases of Thomas McQuiston and his wife, Frances, alleged co-opera-tors with Johnson, will be dismissed because of the same error, Sheaffer said. * • The alleged resort, when raided last week, resulted in confiscation of more than 100 quarts of alleged home brew and beer-making appalatus, police said. The beer, the raiders said, was served cold “on tap," after being drawn through a complicated cooling system, which also was confiscated. The alleged resort served the "best beer in town,” according to persons frequenting its alleged bar. The police warrant described the alleged resort's address as 5340 Rose avenue, but defense attorneys produced witnesses who testified the house is located on Canal boulevard. WILBUR TO SPEAK HERE Hoover’s Interior Secretary to Be Heard by I. U. Alumni. Dr. Ray Lyman Wilbur, secretary of the interior, will be the principal speaker at the annual state teachers’ luncheon of Indiana university allumni Friday "in the Claypool. George F. Highway, secretary, will be in charge.
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