Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 4 October 1937 — Page 18

_ PAGE 18

NYE AND DURANT SCHEDULE TALKS FOR EDUCATORS

Editor and California School Head Also to Address Indiana Teachers.

Senator Nye (R. N. D) and Dr. Will Durant, author, Great Neck, N. Y,, are to be the principal speakers when members of the Indiana State Teachers’ Association meet here Oct. 21 and 22 for their 84th annual convention. Dr. Wendell W. Wright of Indiana University, president, is to preside at sessions to be held in Cadle Tabernacle. ~ The program is to open at 8 p. m. Thursday with an inaugural address

by Dr. Wright. Senator Nye's speech |:

and appointment of eommittees are to complete the session. The business session is to be held Friday morning to be followed at 2 p. m. with an addres by Walter F. Dexter, California Public Instruction superintendent. Tech High School pupils are to stage a “Horace Mann Pageant.” Friday evening’s program is to open with a vocal solo by Douglas Nye of the Indiana University School of Music. Merle Thorpe, Washington, editor of The Nation's

Business, is to speak. oo Degen Ere os ed 59 FACE CHARGES OF GAMBLING HERE Four Raids Made* y : Squad Over Week-End.

Fifty-nine persons were to face gambling charges in Municipal Court today. They were arrested in four weekend police raids. Sergt. Carl Ashley and the vice squad struck first at 212 E. Wabash St. Saturday afternoon, where they arrested Ed ' Fahey, 48, of 436 N. Keystone Ave., on a charge of keeping a gaming house and 12 others on charges of visiting one, Officers raided three other places yesterday afternoon. At 747 N. Noble St., they arrested Russell Deer, 37, ‘of 133 S. Davidson St. and Ray Hine, 44, of 722 E. 9th St., on charges of keeping a gaming house, and 30 - others on visiting charges. Ray Elder, 65, of 224 N. Koehne St., was arrested on a charge of keeping a gambling house and nine . others on charges of visiting in a raid at 134 N. Harding St. Helen Simpson, 33, and Arthur Pash, 36, both of 946 N. Pershing Ave., were charged with keeping a gambling house and two others with visiting when officers staged a raid at their address.

| Speakers x

Dr. Will Durant

|

| | Senator Nye

INDIANA GETS $100,000

WASHINGTON, Oct. 4—Approx{imately $100,000 has been allotted by ithe Rural Electrification Administra[tion for the electrification of 1147 romes in Jackson and Jennings Counties, it was announced today. The project is to require 245 miles of lines.

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BILL PROPOSES FINGER PRINTS INPAWN SALES

Ordinance Revision Seeks To Facilitate Tracing of Stolen Goods.

All persons selling any merchandise to pawn brokers will be finger

printed if an amending ordinance to be introduced by the Safety Board at the City Council meeting tonight, is passed. The purpose of this ordinance, City Attorney Clyde Baker said, is to facilitate the Police Department’s work in tracing stolen goods. While pawn brokers are now required to keep a record of each person selling to them, he said there has been no check on the purveyor of stolen goods who gives a wrong name. The proposed ordinance will enable them to trace stolen objects

turned in at pawn brokers by a comparison of finger prints with those on the police file, he added.

Property Return Provided

A further major change asked in the amendment to the present ordinance would shift the burden of the proof on stolen merchandise to the pawn broker. Under it the police could ask him

to return any questionable piece to the proper owner if the owner files an affidavit claiming it is his. However, the pawn broker has 15 days in which to take legal steps to retain ownership. If legal proceedings are not begun in that time, he must turn the goods over to the police and thence to the owner. This is based, Mr. Baker explained, on another section of the law which reads that it is “unlawful to receive stolen goods from persons you may reasonably suspect.”

Other Proposed Ordinances Also under the proposed changes:

all brokers must close their shops |

at 6 p. m. instead of 7 p. m. and on holidays and election days, and must hold all goods 96 hours before they can be sold instead of the present 72 hours. required. This is to give police more time to trace reported stolen goods. Other ordinances to be considered

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at tonight's session include: New opening and closing times for barber shops; the inspection and licens-.

{ing of coal sold in the city; an

ordinance prohibiting trucks on Pennsylvania St.; an ordinance to impound ' all dogs found on the streets without tags showing they have been vaccinated; a resolution creating a “housing authority” for the city; and an ordinance, establishing a central welfare investigating agency for all welfare agencies.

NIGHT CLASSES TO OPEN Manual Training High School is to conduct the first of a series of night classes at 7:30 p. m. tonight. Classes are to be held every Monday, Wednesday and Friday throughout the school year.

Better School and Home Understanding Is Aim.

Parents of freshmen and new Arsenal Technical High School pupils are to be given a series of three forums, Oct. 12, 14, and 19 in Room 119 of the school. Miss Gertrude Thuemler, girls’

dean, said the purpose of the meetings is to acquaint parents with school aims, organization, and op-

| portunities.

FOR TEGH PARENTS

points of interest, the parents are classes are to hold conferences with to be permitted to ask questions. | parents.

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