Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 13 July 1937 — Page 2
PAGE 2
COUNCIL DEFERS ACTION ON BIKE TAX, TRUCK BAN
$1.25 Levy Law Repealer Is Introduced With List Of Objectors.
A petition bearing an estimated 5000 signatures asking repeal of the $1.25 bicycle license tax law, was on the City Clerk's desk and objectors | against the College Ave. truck ban filled the back of the room, but! legislative procedure decreed that none should be heard. So fireworks expected at last! night's City Council meeting failed | to materialize, The result was a quiet, orderly session as Theo H. Dammeyer, Safety Board president, took truckers, representatives of traffic associa- | tions and College Ave. residents aside in his office to discuss the! problem. And Edward Kealing, anti-bicycle tax leader, decided to wait until the next session, when the formality of the first hearing is over, to ask action on his proposed repeal ordinance. He also is to present the petitions at that time.
Conference Is Held
The exit of Mr. Dammeyer and the truckers came after President Edward Raub declared that nothing could be heard on the truck situation since there was no ordinance pending before the Council. In the seclusion of Mr. Dammeyers office, M. D. Nickel, Indiana Regulated Carriers, Inc. executive secretary, termed the present route “absolutely unsatisfactory.” He referred to the winding path along Keystone Ave, and adjoining streets which trucks are forced to follow since they were banned from College Ave. Norman Kevers, 5715 N. Pennsvivania St, representing Pennsylvania St. residents, said he had tures of 100 property owners 1 38th street north asking that cks be prohibited on their street also He claimed that many trucks are traveling down Pennsyvivania St. now that they have been excluded from all other streets in the northeast section
Will Force Issue, Claim
Nickel said that his associawould “force the issue” and “College Ave. would have to carry the traffic until the City can work out some other route.” To bring action before the Council, Mr. Nickel said the Regulated Carriers would sponsor a proposed ordinance to repeal the College Ave. ban, Residents of College Ave. agreed to have the ban lifted if it would also be taken from all other streets, it was reported. Mr. Nickel and Harry E. Yockey, Indiana Motor Traffic Association attorney, said they would withhold all action until the Mayor's committee had studied the trucking routes An ordinance transferring $40.711.98 in the Police Department payroll budget from first-grade patrolmen to second-grade was approved
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by a 6 to 1 vote. Mr. Kealing was the only member to oppose it.
Appropriation Bills Asked
Two appropriation bills were passed unanimousiy One appropriated $162.50 to the Street Department and the other $250 to the City Engineer's Department. Proposed taxicab ordinances requiring that from the City Controller in case of the transfer of a license and that the name of the owner and operator be placed on the door of each cab were held over until the next meeting posed ordinance increasing the pay of policemen and firemen to the $168 minimum set by the State Legislature, to become effective Jan. 1, 1938. Among the proposed ordinances
a transfer be obtained |
Also held over was a pro- |
| introduced for the first time were: |A bill which would prohibit sale of | uncooked meats and perishable mer{chandise on Sundays and legal holi|days; a health board ordinance {which would require vaccination of (all dogs, except kennel dogs, against |rabies, and a bill providing a loan
{of $650,000 until anticipated tax col- |
|lections are made. The Police Department, in a pro[posed ordinance, asked that left] [turns be banned at several intersec- | tions.
| EXPLOSION DAMAGES MILL | Dust explosion, said by firemen {to have been caused by an over- | heated oil heater, caused approxi- | mately $200 damage on the fourth
| floor of the Evans Milling Co, | Cable St. and White River, yester- | i day.
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THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
TUESDAY, JULY 13, 1937
Helen Wills Moody Takes Residence in Nevada;
Cautiously Tells
By United Press RENO, Nev, July 13.—Helen Wills Moody, who for years was an international tennis champion, settled in a rustic cottage on the shores of Lake Tahoe today to establish the six-weeks’ residence required for a divorce in Nevada. She has conferred with Robert M. Price, Reno divorce lawyer, and she admitted to reporters, after much cautious word bartering, that it was her intention to divorce Frederick S. Moody Jr., oil executive and member of a prominent San Francisco family.
They were married seven years
Reporters Reno
ago after a romance that started on the French Riviera. At the Moody home in San Francisco, it was reported that he was on a two-week vacation in northern California. ' It was his sister-in-law, Mrs. Corbitt Moody, San Mateo, Cal, who first tipped off the news that the “poker face” of the tennis court expected to divorce her husband. “Of course she went to Nevada to get a divorce,” Mrs. Corbitt Moody said. With this statement reporters forced the reluctant admission from
Divorce Is Goal
the tennis star that she visited Mr. Price, that she had separated from her husband and that “once my mind is made up I see no reason for prolonging anything.” She was asked what grounds she would charge in a divorce suit. She
like that will ‘be up to Mr. Price.” A possible rift between the Moodys long had been rumored but was denied consistently by Mrs. Moody until her arrival here. She laughed when asked if there was another romance in her life. “Newspaper people get so many funny ideas,” she said. }
| replied that she supposed “anything |
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