Indianapolis Times, Volume 45, Number 109, Indianapolis, Marion County, 15 September 1933 — Page 4

PAGE 4

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THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

CITY NIGHT LIFE IS MENACED BY PROPOSED LAW Council to Scan Ordinance for Beer Sale Control; Fight Looms. One of the most drastic proposals for the control of beer sellers in Indianapolis, which will be introduced before the city council Monday night, today has aroused a furor among club and restaurant managers, and a heated protest is expected to me made to the council. Drafted by the safety board, the proposed ordinance places staggering penalties on violators, including revocation of the restaurant licenses, thereby forcing withdrawal by the state excise director of the beer-selling license. Drastic in Terms The proposed measure provides that all restaurants “or places where food is sold and where alcoholic, malt, or vinous beverages are sold'’ are prohibited from remaining open between the hours of 1 a. m. and 5 a. m. on any day of the week. For violation of this section, a maximum fine of S3OO and sixty days’ imprisonment is set out. The measure also provides that it shall be unlawful for any such place where musical entertainment ot any kind is permitted to continue "such musical entertainment between the hours of 12 o’clock midnight and 7 a. m. of any day.” For violation of this clause, the proposed measure provides a maximum fine of SIOO and thirty days imprisonment. Power to Revoke In addition to these penalties, the ordinance would authorize the mayor, or city controller, to have the power to revoke the restaurant license of any violator of any of the provisions. Affected by the law would be downtown clubs, and all night club operators within the city limits. Observers today saw the proposed ordinance as a “blue law.” They point out that night life in Indianapolis, under such a law, would be brought to an abrupt halt at midnight. Restaurant men are expected to appear before the council in a body to protest against the measure. MASTER RETAIL CODE OPPOSES PRICE FIXING Victory for Ts T RA Consumers’ Board Seen in Tentative Draft. By Scripps-Howard Xrtcspaper Alliance WASHINGTON. Sept. 15.—Opposition to price-fixing in general principle is expressed by Deputy Administrator A. D. Whiteside, who drafted the master retail code, in a letter accompanying the completed code which he submitted to General Johnson, NRA administrator, it was learned today. Whiteside, however, approved a form of price control in the retail code which requires that all goods must be sold at a certain percentage above the invoice price. The percentage varies for foods, drugs and other products. Tlie deputy administrator’s general disapproval of price-fixing represents a partial victory for the NRA consumer advisory board, which demanded that it be allowed to review the code before it was submitted to General Johnson.

BUY MOW PRICES S"ACI/ F~ i If ip pos)filp. at unr time to tr3<l- in thp® dlala' v vr J rronrip. ..- anv Kay <lnnio!><i v ittj full purchase

HEADS BEER DEALERS

That repealing smile belongs to Paul E. Burke, of Baltimore, new-ly-elected president of the United States Association of Beer and Liquor Dealers.

TORTURE CASE SDSPECT TAKEN Loogootee Man Arrested in Robbery of Blind Civil War Veteran. By Times Special MARSHALL, 111., Sept. 15.—Suspected in the torture robbery of Golden Mills, 91-year-old felind Civil war veteran, Rolla Burris. 46, Loogootee, Ina? is held here today. Clark county authorities deny a report that Burris is suspected of any connection with another torture robbery which ended in the murder of Mrs. Mary Schrader, 82, near Newton, 111. Harold L. Peck of Indianapolis is one of five men held in the Schrader tragedy, which occurred Aug. 29, a week after. Mills was robbed. Mills and his daughter, Miss Susie Mills, were tied to chairs in their home twelve iTtiles south of here. Their hair was pulled and they were mistreated otherwise by tliree men seeking hiding place of money. Loot of SIOO was obtained. FATHER, SON JAILED FOR STEALING BUCKET “Pass Buck” of Blame as 30-Day Terms Are Meted in Court. Father and son “passed the buck” today in the theft of a $2 bucket and each was fined $1 and costs with a thirty-day jail term. Dan Acton, 59, and his son Everett, 33, of 203 Quill street, were sentenced by Municipal Judge Dewey E. Myers on larceny convictions. The bucket was the property of the Rev. D. O. Crowe, pastor of the Wesleyan Methodist church, Hoyt avenue and Shelby street, and was stolen from the rear of his home at 735 Shelby street. The son said: “I stole the because father told me to.” “We needed a water bucket; that’s why we stole the bucket,” the elder Acton explained. Burglars Steal Adding Machines Burglars who broke into the office of Dr. H. E. Barnard, 66 West New York street, during the night escaped with two adding machines and two typewriters, with a total value of $2lB. police reported today.

.SEPT. 15, 1933

GUARD MILK j SHIPMENTS IN ' CHICAGO AREA Violence Is Threatened as Farm Pickets Form: Two Are Arrested. By J nilrd Tr. .* WOODSTOCK, m . Sept. 15.—Ef- | forts to halt a milk embargo in Kane and McHenry counties was being made on three fronts today, while strikers, protesting against j low prices, declared they would prevent milk from being shipped to Chicaeo markets. Neighboring farmers, heartened by an agreement between the Pure Milk Association and large distribu- | tors that promises an immediate 1 cent a quart increase in the price of milk, sought to prevent violence and , guarantee safe shipment of milk j through picket lines. Vigilante groups were burned by I farmers opposed to the strike. They I joined with county authorities in escorting milk trucks through groups of pickets. Producers to Benefit In Chicago, distributors and officials of the association were : speeding efforts to bring about the price increase. Approval of the department of agriculture is necessary. Present plans calls for passing the entire increase on to the producers. In Washington, officials who drafted the Chicago milk marketing act, pondered over enforcement of the iron-clad code. They were i reported vitally concerned over de-, ! velopments in McHenry and Kane ! counties. Two arrests were made Thursday as violence broke out. Herman Page of Harvard, was arrested on a ! charge that he poured disinfectant into 500 pounds of milk. Ralph Williams of Hebron, was arrested when he went to Page’s assistance. Shipments Near Normal Distributing officials said they believed that milk shipments were nearly 95 per cent normal. At only | four points, Woodstock, Crystal Lake, Hampshire and Virgil, was j the embargo completely effective. It was understood that attempts | would be made today to take milk through picket lines at Woodstock ! and Crystal Lake. These two points ! were believed to be centers of the j strike. The strike was believed to be supported by about 1.000 farmers. CIGAR STORE CLERK GETS LOTTERY FINE Motion to Suppress Sustained, But Guilty Finding Made. Despite sustaining of a motion to suppress evidence, Robert Wynn, | employed in a cigar store at 476 | Massachusetts avenue, was fined $lO and costs today by Municipal Judge Dewey E. Myers on a charge of operating a lottery and gift enterprise. Sentence was suspended. Police said they caught Wynn in the act? of selling baseball pool' tickets to W. H. Drake, 412 North Alabama street. However, a dollar which Drake had laid on a counter presumably in payment was not taken by Wynn, and Drake replaced the money in his pocket. None of the tickets said by police to have been seized could be offered in evidence, due to sustaining the motion to suppress.