Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 7 July 1936 — Page 6
ARMY SERVICE
9 to Re Report for Year's Duty i I Harrison Commander.
| Twenty-nine reserve officers of second lieutenant rank are to report Thursday | Brig. Gen. W. K. NayJor,- Fort Harrison commanding officer, for a year of active service. Nearly pne thousand selected officers, serving under provisions of the Thomason Act, passed by the last sessi of Congress at (he request of the War Department are to augment officer personnei supplied by the U. 8. Military Academy. Among [those from Indiana who
volunteered for service are Ross G. olumbus; Woodrow W.
fayette; Howard Peters,
e. They are to work with penth Field Artillery. Ordered to train with the Eleventh Infantry are Joseph O. Butcher, Bloomington; William C. Ewbank, Lawrenceburg; Raymond J. Higgins, New Haven, and John E. Linch, Bloomington.
Utility, Faces Council Battle
Huntington Body Outlines Attempt to Oust Him From: Office.
Times Special HUNTINGTON, Ind, July 7— With Mayor Clare W. H. Bangs in jail, a majority of City Council members announced that a meeting is to be held tonight to attempt for a third time to pass an ordinance giving the council authority to remove any city official, including the Mayor. Bangs went to jail yesterday rather comply with a court order directing him to stop. providing electricity from the municipal plant for domestic and commercial consumption. The other city officials, ordered, to jail with Bangs, resigned at his request and escaped court action. They were Arthur D. Sayler, city attorney, and 8; Perry Hull, light plant superintendent.
Second Time in Jail Two light plant employes, however, are in jail with the Mayor. They are Max Pinney, cashier, and Clayton Brown, an employe. It is the second time the militant Mayor has been jailed in his fight to establish a municipal light plant in competition with the Northern Indiana Power Co., which obtained
an injunction fo halt extension of municipal service lines to patrons of | the company. The last time he went to jail, Mayor Bangs spent 101 days in confinement, but obtained his freedom by posting bond guaranteeing payment of damages in event the Supreme Court upheld the injunction of the power company. The Supreme Court has not yet ruled upon
Bang’s appeal from the injunction.
The ordinance, said to be aimed ly ‘at Bangs, twice has been vetoed by the Mayor.
INJURED TRAVELER FILES FOR DAMAGES
Charges Shuffleboard Disc Hurt Ankle; Wants $5000.
Alleging that she was struck by a disc while watching a shuffleboard game on board the steamship President Adams, Darline Cauldwell has filed suit in Superior Court against the Dollar Steamship Line for damages of $5000. : Miss Cauldwell charged the pleasure of the trip was ruined by the accident, which, she said, injured her ankle. She charged that the firm should have warned its passengers of the alleged danger of watching a shuffleboard game,
FUND MEMORIAL FOR DEMOCRATS
‘Monument’ Mite-Box Gifts to Aid Republican Campaign.
The Republican State Committee of Indiana is taking up a “memorial” collection for the Democratic party. In the Committee’s headquarters in the Claypool Hotel a muaiature monument stands on a desk railing. It is dedicated to the “New Deal” and an inscription says:
A slot in the top of the epitaph receives coins from visitors. The Marion County Reptblican Committee has ordered one of the
collection boxes for it’S new head-
quarters at the Washington. Democrats said the chief drawback to the campaign monument is that the collection, although an “in memorium,” is to go into the coffers of the G. O. P..instead of to the rightful heirs of the so-called “deceased.”
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POLO SHIRTS: Clearance of higherpriced polo shirts. Odd’ lot of new styles. -
July: Sale! 300 Boys’ $1.19
