Indianapolis Times, Volume 45, Number 31, Indianapolis, Marion County, 16 June 1933 — Page 10
PAGE 10
DRY RAIDS SOON TO END UNDER ECONOMY ACT Number of Agents to Be ' Reduced Drastically by Roosevelt. JUi Scripps-Jtou ard Xcuspaprr Alliance WASHINGTON, June 16. The prohibition bureau and the United States bureau of investigation are about to vanish from public life. The raids on "reds” and “wets” that have been a feature of American life since the World war will end. By executive order issued under the economy act, President Roosevplt will cut the number of dry agents in the field from approximately 2,200 to 1,000 or less. The administration already has expressed its displeasure at violent raids by federal officials, and intends to leave the remnants of that kind, of enforcement to the states. Fairly quick repeal is anticipated, and economy demands retrenchment here of all places. The bureau of investigation, a little known department to the general public, will be abolished, and in its place will be set up a small, compact and efficient organization charged with making all investigations for the various government departments. Instead of the 800 investigators now serving under J. Edgar Hoover, bureau chief, it is 1 probable the investigatory person- j nel will be no larger than SSO or 400. It is this bureau which has been j involved in red-hunting, secret ac- i tivities and other allegedly anti- j American doings ever since the era of Harry Daugherty, William J. Burns and Gaston A. Means. Mr. Hoover joined the service about that time and over a decade it has grown to proportions which alarmed the administration's high officials. It was this bureau which was charged with "framing” Senator Burton K. Wheeler (Dem., Mont.), after he conducted the investigation tnat led to the resignation of ex-Attorney-General was this bureau which furnished the material for ex-President Hoover’s statement that the majority of last year's evicted bonus army were "criminals or Communists." ROSE TIRE HIKES PAY City Company Increases Wages of Employes 10 Per Cent. A 10 per cent increase in wages was announced today by Art Rose,! head of the Rose Tire Company, to- i gether with the addition of several persons to the firm's personnel. Rose said the company's business has shown a “tremendous increase” in the last sixty days.
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Fifty Lads Enrolled for Opening of Camp Gridley
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TRUCK DRIVER ROBBED $23 Taken by Armed Bandit, He Reports to Police. Harold Paterson, 32, of 2907 Cornell avenue, truck driver, was robbed late Thusrday when he stopped in the 200 block Butler avenue to make deliveries. As he stepped from the truck he was held up by an armed bandit who forced him to lie in bottom of the truck. According to Patterson, another bandit drove the truck to the 300 block on Butler avenue, where he was searched and $23 stolen from a pocket. The bandits covered him with packages and threatened to kill him if he moved, he told police.
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Frank (Pop) Heddon
Summer Season On Bass Lake Resort Will Start Today. Approximately fifty Indianapolis boys are expected to attend Camp Gridley, wllose summer season will open today at Bass lake. The course will last ten weeks, although boys may enroll for as short a period as two weeks. Commander C. L. White, Indianapolis, will be in charge of the camp. His mother, Mrs. Mary E. White, will act as camp nurse and dietitian. Athletics, will be in charge of Frank (Pop* Heddon, freshman coach at Butler university. Heddon will be assisted by Frank Weltcm, ex-Manual high school star.
HOP TO HUH MAIN HEWS REEL FEATURE Capt. Boyd’s Takeoff Shown in Universal Film. Dramatic scenes at Floyd Bennett field, New York, as Captain J. Errol Boyd and his two companions kiss their w T ives good-by and take off on the first successful non-stop flight to Haiti are to be seen in the current issue of The Indianapolis Times - Universal Newsreel. Graham McNamee, noted radio announcer, and the screen’s Talking Reporter, describes this and the other important events in the reel in his inimitable manner. Other outstanding news events of the week reported by McNamee include unusual views at Bear Mountain, N. Y., as the first contingent of unemployed girls arrive at the camp provided for them by the state temporary relief administration, and thrilling views at Mexico City as toreadors fight ferocious bulls amidst all the ancient Spanish pomp and splendor of the arena. SCHOOL HEADS ELECT Cass County Superintendent Named President of Association. Delegates of the Indiana County Superintendents’ Association Thursday elected Reed Groninger, superintendent of Cass county schools, president of the association, at the close of a two-day session in the Lincoln. Other officers elected were: U. S. Abbott, Princeton, superintendent of Gibson county schools, vice-presi-dent, and Mrs. Eugene Hayden, Rockport, secretary. Arthur H. Hines, Richmond, was re-elected treasurer.
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THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
400 DRUGGISTS OF STATE WILL ATTENDSESSION Annual 3-Day Convention to Start Tuesday at Lake Wawasee. State druggists will hold a threeday session at Lake Wawasee. starting Tuesday, the occasion being the fifty-second annual convention of the Indiana Pharmaceutical Association. About 400 members are expected to attend. This will be the first state-wide meeting of the Indiana druggists since repeal of the Wright bone dry law, permitting the sale of alcoholic beverages. The matter of the sale of medicinal whisky, beer and wine in drug stores will be considered. In addition to the president’s annual address and reading of officers’ reports, the Drug Institute of America will discuss President Roosevelt’s plan for controlled production and distribution of drug store commodities. Kiefer Mayer Is Speaker Kiefer Mayer, an officer of the institute and one of the original promoters, will be the speaker. The institute represents the combined forces of a $2,000,000,000 industry. Dr. J. H. Weinstein, president of the Indiana State Medical Society: Dean C. B. Jordan of the Purdue university school of pharmacy, and Dean Edward H. Niles of rhe Indianapolis College of Pharmacy, will be the principal speakers Tuesday afternoon. Dr. Weinstein will discuss the "Cost of Medical Care.” State Officials on Program Samuel C. Henry of Chicago, secretary of the National Association of Retail Druggists, and Harry S. Noel, advertising director of Eli Lilly & Cos., Indianapolis, will speak Wednesday, and C. A. Jackson, director of the Indiana income and sales tax division, and Fred Bechdolt, assistant excise director, will be the principal speakers on Thursday. Officers of the association are: Francis A. Britt, Evansville, president: F. V. McCullough, New Albany, secretary: Joseph W. Weis, Hammond, treasurer; Asa E. Smith, Logansport, chairman of the executive committee, and H. J. Borst, Indianapolis; E. E. Goodnight, Lafayette; E. A. Ridgely, Gary; C. F. Wilson, Rushville, and Harry W. Miller, Terre Haute, members of the executive committee. 900 SEEK FOREST"IOBS War Veterans Anxious to Get Work in Conservation Corps. Nine hundred Indiana war veterans have applied for jobs in the forests, according to John H. Ale, manager of veterans’ administration service, at his headquarters today in the hospital on Cold Spring road. Three hundred applications for work in the civilian conservation corps have been made by Marion county veterans. Eighty-five men will be selected from the county to fill its quota. Choice of men will be based on length of service, time of unemployment, and number of dependents. Enrollment will begin June 26 and end July 6. DR. CORT WILL SPEAK Missionary Hospital Head to Give Sermon at City Church. Dr. E. C. Cort, who, with Mrs. Cort, has been the guest of Dr. J. Ambrose Dunkel, pastor of the Tabernacle Presbyterian church, will give the sermon Sunday morning in the First Presbyterian church. Dr. and Mrs. Cort, who have been on furlough for the last year, will return soon to Chiengami, Siam, where they are in missionary service, and where Dr. Cort Is head of a large hospital. He is a fellow of the Royal Society of Tropical Medicine in London.! While in the United States, he was j given an honorary degree of doctor j of science by Washington and Jes- , ferson university.
CYCLE COP IS INJURED Suffers Cuts, Friction Burns in Crack-Up During Chase. Motorcycle Patrolman E. B. Haught, 38. of 5138 Schofield avenue, suffered cuts and friction burns when he was hurled from his cycle Thursday night chasing a speeder in the 1600 block of East Michigan street. Haught’s cycle collided with the car of Charles Knannlein, 1609 East Michigan street, as it pulled away from the curb. Knannlein was not held.
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STATE V. OF F, W. GATHER AT MADISON More Than 2,000 Expected to Attend Parley. By United Press MADISON. Ind., June 16.—Delegates to the annual encampment of the Indiana department of Veterans of Foreign Wars swarmed into
Madison today. More than 2.000 are expected to attend. Early arrivals met at Brown gymnasium Thursday night where they heard an address by Governor Paul V. McNutt. The encampment will close with a military ball in Knights of Pythias hall. Save time and many weary steps by using Times Mid-June Rental Guide when looking for anew home. It may be obtained at any Haag Drug Store.
.JUNE 16, 1933
PILOT CLEARED IN WORLD FAIR CRASH Coroner’s Jury Exonerates Flier in Tragedy. By United Press CHICAGO. June 15.—A coroner's jury late Thursday exonerated the pilot of the world s fair sightseeing amphibian which crashed last Sunday with a loss of nine lives.
