Indianapolis Times, Volume 45, Number 41, Indianapolis, Marion County, 28 June 1933 — Page 16
PAGE 16
M'CLAIN, CITED FOR CONTEMPT, SETTLES FIGHT Circuit Court Flurry Ends Uneventfully; Receiver Dispute Explained. Defiance of the authority of Circuit Judge Earl R. Cox by Harry E. McClain, state insurance commissioner, and threatened contempt of court action by the Judge, created a flurry Tuesday which ended uneventfully. McClain was haled into court on a contempt citation following a dispute with Clyde Karrer, who was appointed by Cox as receiver of a $268,000 legal reserve fund involved In circuit court litigation. Fred A Wiecking, first assistant a'torney-general, accompanied McCain to court and defended his refusal to turn over the fund to Karrer. Willing for Inventory Cox declared he had been informed that McClain refused to cooperate with Karrer, but Wiecking said that McClain was willing to permit an inventory of the fund end a certification of its existence. 1 Refusal to turn over the physical assets of the fund to Karrer was given by McClain on Weicking’s advice, the latter said. For several months the affairs of the Chicago National Life Insurance Company and the Pacific States Life Insurance Company have been the subject of argument by various groups of attorneys in circuit court. Claims Unpaid, Is Charge It is said that the legal reserve fund of the Chicago company were acquired along with outstanding claims by the Pacific company. A replevin action by the latter company against the insurance department, to secure the legal reserve deposited according to law precipitated the litigation. Attorneys representing local claimants of the insurance protested against return of the fund to the Insurance company, alleging that Unpaid claims existed. McClain petitioned in superior court one, Thomas O'Connor, judge j pro tern., to have himself appointed ! local receiver of the Chicago com- ! pany, as an individual and not as a state official, although a receiver | has been named in Illinois courts, it I was charged. To Serve Without Pay Cox questioned Wiecking regarding McClain’s plans for the receiver- j ship and was assured that the offi- j cial would serve without pay. "Did the court entry specify he i Would serve without pay," Cox asked. “No, but he will,” Wiecking re- I plied. “The appointment of an official j to a receivership as an individual is j a most unusual procedure,” Cox commented. Cox instructed Karrer to make a minute inventory of the fund and to i obtain a receipt from McClain for the notes and mortgages.
AD CLUB TO INSTALL; HOLD FROLIC THURSDAY Riviera Club and Meridian Hills Golf Course Scene of Fete. Annual frolic and installation of officers of the Advertising Club will be held Thursday afternoon and night at the Riviera Club, 5650 North Illinois street. For those who play golf, the Meridian Hills course has been obtained for the afternoon. Swimming pool and other facilities of the Riviera Club will be avalable for club members and their guests. There will be an entertainment program by professional talent, a chicken dinner and installation ceremony for new club officers. NEW METHODS STUDIED Stale Beauty Shop Owners and Operators Attend Demonstration. Beauty shop owners and operators from various parts of Indiana attended an educational meeting and demonstration Tuesday night at the Rainbow Beauty Academy and Supply Company, 38 North Pennsylvania street. Anew eyebrow’ tweezer, powered by electricity and W’hich is painless in operation, was demonstrated. New’ modes in hair dressing and permanent waving w’ere shown.
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FOILS BLACKMAIL PLOT
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A plot to extort $4,700 from Mrs. Katherine Brown Fuller (above), wealthy New York widow and socialite, w-as frustrated when police arrested a jobless bartender and his wife as the man looked for a decoy package deposited in a Manhattan beer garden in response to blackmail notes.
CAU6HRAN MAY BE NAMEDJOLAN’S AID City Beard Lawyer Slated for U. S. Post. B. Howard Caughran, Indianapolis health board attorney, probably will be named chief assistant United States district attorney, to aid District Attorney Val Nolan, it was announced today in a dispatch from Washington. Nolan refused to comment on the wire report, stating that any announcements of a choice for his assistant probably would be made in Washington by Senator Frederick Van Nuys. Caughran. a Democrat, has been health board attorney more than four years, and has offices at 525 Indiana Trust building. He lives at 5412 Guilford avenue. He would succeed Alexander G Cavins, Republican, who has served as chief assistant to the last several district attorneys, making an excellent record. FREE BANDIT SUSPECTS Two Captured at Warsaw Cleared in Ohio Bank Robberies. Il ii I nilnl Prrsx WARSAW, Ind.. June 28.—Herbert Longbrake, Mishawaka, and John Ellis, South Bend, were freed by police here when they were unable to connect the two men with crimes committed by Merritt Longbrake, uncle of Herbert. Merritt Longbrake, who is claimed to have confessed a series of bank robberies in Ohio and Indiana, was identified Tuesday as the lone handit who took $2,900 from the state bank of Hicksville, 0., last April.
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THE INDIANAPOLIS TTMES
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