Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 3 May 1939 — Page 12

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TERRE HAUTE | Cuckoo TRACTION LINE Half of Town Operates CASE DELAYED| vie Te

Question P. S. C. Jurisdiction ANEnon, ou May 3 (U. ' | P.).—Time was divided in At Hearing on Trolley | Americus today. Half the city was | operating on Daylight Savings Abandonment. Time while the other half stuck SR to Central Standard Time. 3 { Because of the controversy he Hearings on the proposed aban-| (jock atop the Sumter County donment of the Indianapolis-Terre| court House was stopped. OfHaute traction line of the Indiaha| fejals couldn't agree whethe: the Railroad were postponed today timepiece should be kept “norinal” pending a decision on the question] 4. turned ahead an hour. of whether the Public Service Com-| jty Council voted for Daylight mission has jurisdiction in the case. mje There was a storm of proCommission Chairman Perry Mc-| tog from farmers, housewives and Cart stopped the hearing yesterday, jiinisters. when he raised the question of| jurisdiction and attorneys were in-| structed to prepare legal arguments on it for submission next Monday. Mr. McCart questioned the Com- | mission's right to hear the case on| the ground that the Indiana Rail-| road is operating under a receiver-| ship in Superior Court 5. He also raised the question that the Interstate Commerce Commission might have some jurisdiction in| any move to abandon the line. The Commission will rule on its

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OW City and postal employees are working on Daylight Time. Some stores open and close an hour earlier than others. But most of the citizens are observing Standard Time. Americus in 1938 went on Daylight Savings Time for a short period and then at a City referendum it was voted to return to Standard Time,

jurisdiction after arguments Mon-, X day, Mr. McCart said. X During the hearing. delegations 3

a new bus route planned as 2a substitute for the rail line would} not serve them adequateiy.

from several towns along the trac-| tion line protested the proposed] 3 abandonment on the groufid that] 3

3 Louis Rappaport, Indiana Rrail- Declares It Would Mean

road auditor, testified that the com-| pany sought to abandon the line} Death of Democracy because “it has been losing money | . for the last five years.” He said | In America. the loss in 1938 was more than}! Se sha $40,000. | Times Special

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30,000 EXPECTED

| here, Rep. Charles A. Halleck (R

WASHINGTON, May 3.— United ; | States participation in ac foreign |: | war will mean the end of democracy 3

'Tnd.) told his colleagues in the]: {House in an address appearing in

More than 30.000 convention visjtors are expected in Indianapolis this month, Henry T. Davis, Indianapolis Convention and Publicity Bureau secretary-manager, said today. The largest convention is expected to be the National High School Orchestra Association regional contest with an estimated attendance of 5000. It will meet May 18 to 20.| Ancther convention expected to; draw some 300 engineers is the World Automotive Engineering Congress meeuing here May 29 and 30. Returning to Indianapolis for their annual meetings after an absence are the Indiana Bankers’ Association, Grand Encampment of Knights Templar. Ladies of the Oriental Shrine and the Indiana Walther League. Among large groups that will meet here are the Indiana State Dental Association, Indiana Funeral Directors’ Association. Indiana State Federation of Clubs, F. & A. M. and Indiana State Restaurant Associa-| tion. {

SCHOOL PRINCIPALS | TO DISCUSS PAPERS.

| A “workshop conference” for In-| dianapolis public scheol principals! and publications advisers will be held May 8 at the Central Y. M. C. A. An exhibit of school publications, material and equipment for publishing papers will be open from 3 to 6 p. m,, William A. Evans, schools’ publications director, said. Panel discussions will be held on] “Making School Papers Reflect the School Community,” “Financing School Papers,” “Makeup Problems,” “Pupil Participation,” and “Frequency of Publication.” Miles Tiernan, city editor of The Indian-| apolis Star, will speak at the dinner meeting at 6 p. m. on "The Newspaper and the School. |

PUSH SELECTION OF JURY AT FT. WAYNE

FT. WAYNE, May 3 (U. P) —Efforts to select a jury to try Adrian Miller, 31, for murder entered the third day in the Allen County Circuit Court today with a new panel! of 30 additional talesmen called. Prosecutor C. Byron Hayes and Defense Attorney Wayne Miller 'yes- | terday failed to select even one tentatively. Nine jurors have been seated so far, but attorneys indicated one of these may be excused. Miller is charged with murdering 18-year-old Alice May Girton, Winchester farm girl.

ATTACK CASE NEARS END

BOONVILLE, May 3 (U.P).-— The case of Herb Harrison, charged with assaulting Katie Henzel, 54-year-old spinster, was expected to go to the jury today.

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He denied that businessmen,|: either big or little, want war and|: inserted into the Record the anti-

war resolutions adopted last week

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“Nothing is more important at|

this time te the people of this country than that the United States keep out of war,” Rep. Halleck declared. “All this talk about the necessity of America playing her part in world affairs to save democracy is nonsense if it means a risk of this country's being involved in another foreign war. “Our businessmen, thank God, know that all American economy

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