Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 11 July 1939 — Page 10
PAGE 10
RECIPROCAL TAX! eg by Fraternal Order
PLAN INDORSED 10 BAR | CLINIC
Hogan's View view Is Oonosels Constitution ‘Rediscovered,’ Jackson Says.
SAN FRANCISCO, July 11 (U. P.).—The New Deal program {for reciprocal taxation between thes State and Federal Governments was | indorsed today by Arthur H. Kent | of San Francisco in an address] before the Federal Taxation Clinic] of the American Bar Association. | He opposed the viewpoint expressed yesterday by Frank J. Hogan, bar association president, by referring to tax exemption laws as “artificial refuges” for capital and SS “not conducive to a healthy state, in our democracy. I “I believe also that the general economic effect of partial or total tax exemption of an enormous and
The Rev. Thomas J. Lacey ...
Times Photo. attends Ahepa Convention.
growing body of weaith is de finitely bad,” he said. Jackson Disputes Hogan Mr. Kent praised the New Deal viewpoint that tases on incomes from securities as well as iaxes on State and Federal saiaries were | sound. Mr. Kent's statement came after} zn address by U. S. Solicitor Gen-|
‘today.
that in some cities false alarms ave
eral Robert H. Jackson, who said the Supreme Court had “rediscovered” the Constitution and now interprets it as intended by the men who drafted it Mr. Jackson's speech was interpreted as an answer to Mr. Hogan, whose attack on re- HISTORICAL JOURNAL cent decisions of the Supreme Court opened the sessions yesterday. IS REVIVED IN UTAH Robert Carey, former New Jersey fe judge, announced that he would ie the 1 right of the A. B. A's SALT LAKE CITY, July 1 CU. committee on civil rights to func-/P.).—The Utah State Historical Sotion in the name of the organiza- ciety will publish a journal of facts, tion. concerning settlement of Mormon | Expected Tomorrow { church immigrants. Mr. Carey's attack is expected to! Publication of the journal was be made before the House of Dele- abandoned in 1933, but increased gates tomorrow. Mr. Hogan has requests from all sections of the said he will marshal convention country for information about the: forces to retain the committee. {state's early history prompted of5 Diustons of criminal law and|ficials to revive the magazine. talk by Roscoe Pound, dean emer-| | Writers, historians, lawyers, libra-| itus of Harvard Law School. fea- rians and descendants of Utah| tured section meetings today. There pioneers have asked for continua- | was no meeting of the assembly. [tion of the magazine.
|
False Alarms Few Here, Chief Says After Survey
The Indianapolis Fire Department doesn't have the false alarm worries which departments in other cities have, Chief Kennedy said
A survey by the International City Managers’ Association revealed
rage up to 20 per cent of the total j alarms. Up until the close of last week, the | Fire Department answered 1727 calls; ' this year—502 box alarms and 1225; by telephone. The department] recorded 135 false alarms, but they | included ‘scare alarms,” calls made; by excited persons who think al house is afire when it isn't.
Percentage Is Small
But:-there were only 40 “malicious” false alarms and that’s only .02 per cent of the total. Indianapolis city ordinances pro- | vide no specific penalties for sound-| ing false alarms. Most of them are| sounded by boys. Adults convicted | are fined and in some cases get jail sentences up to 30 days. In an effort to curb the practice,
of turning in false alarms, which
{result in additional fire department costs and in deaths and injuries to] | firemen and pedestrians, many ap-| | proaches have been used in other | cities. | Portland, Ore. attached a sign—
[AEP HONORS
(Brooklyn Rector Is Attending
i|tion of Ahepa as a speaker and i | sort of unofficial guest of honor. |
PASTOR FRIEND OF U. S. GREEKS
Indiana Convention of Hellenic Group.
When Greek meets Greek in convention, very likely he will run into the Rev. Thomas J. Lacey, rector of the Church of the Redeemer in Brooklyn, N. Y.
Dr. Lacey is in Indianapolis attending the 12th District conven-
And he is receiving a cordial wel- | come from Indiana Greeks who know him as a veteran and en-|
Be here tomorrow when the doors open at 9:30 A. M. Every department is chucked full of timely items, just when you need them, at prices you'll be happy to pay! In many instances the quantities are limited . . . Sorry, No Mail, Phone, or C. O. D. Orders.
thusiastic champion of the Hellenic race in America. A native of Cincinnati, Dr. Lacey says he joined Ahepa not becausz of a scholarly interest in Greek, but because he liked the many Greek neighbors in his Brooklyn parish. Even before Ahepa was founded in 1922, he had been decorated with the order of a Knight of King George 1 by the] late King Alexander of Greece, in appreciation of the interest he had shown to Greek natives and descendants in America.
Attends Florida Service
For 30 years the Episcopal curate
has been a regular attendant at the | =
Greek Epiphany Day celebration at! Tarpon Springs, Fla. He has seen| the audiences at the observance] {grow from ahout 30, when he began attending, to 12,000 last vear. It is
the one place in America to see real Greek life, he says. Dr. Lacey was one of a compattise, which presented President Roose-| {velt with his certificate of member- | |ship in Ahepa shortly after he was| inaugurated. Among other nationally known American members of the society! are Paul V. McNutt and Governor Vanderbilt of Rhode Island. In between his duties toward his own flock and attendance at various conventions, Dr. Lacey has found time to compose some verses in| praise and has incorporated them | into an illustrated booklet.
Name Is Explained
And, quite naturally, he is able {to clear up the prevalent mystery surrounding the meaning of the society’s name, Ahepa stands for American Hel-
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|“Think—A False Alarm May Cost | | lenic Educational Progressive Ags0e]
a Life"—to its fire alarm boxes. | ciation. | City officials say the number of | The 12th District comprises the
‘false alarms was cut substantially. hine Indiana chapters, and the pres-
‘Cambridge, Mass, uses this same ent convention is the largest in its method. | history, officers said. Approximately
‘ g 300 delegates will attend today's sesNew York Penalties Set sion and election of officers will be followed tonight by a banquet and
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‘sounding a false alarm or tamper-
The penal code of. New York State sets penalties for turning in false alarms at a minimum fine of $10, or 10 days’ imprisonment, or both. In| Boston, a warning was issued that
ling with a fire box is punishable by
Isystem
a fine of not more than $500 or two months in jail. Boston officials also have tried a under which sirens are
‘Lacey. A reception for delegates and
dance in the Claypool Hotel Riley | Room. { The convention yesterday heard addresses by Mayor Sullivan, Lieut. Gov. Schricker and the Rev. Mr.
their friends was held last night at the home of John G. Zazas, 4356 N.! Meridian St. | George Geroulis, 1207 Carrollton { Ave., is president of the Indianapolis jelapler oF Jo) nein of 120 members.
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NICKEL SLOT MACHINE BRINGS FINE OF $25
WARSAW, Ind. July 11 (U. P).| —Pleading guilty in City Court to! a charge of illegal possession of a 5-cent slot machine, Otis Thorn- | burg, Ridinger Lake, was fined $25 by Mayor J. S. Hansman. Prosecutor J. S. Koontz issued a second warning against operation of punch boards which he has been informed have appeared at Kosciusko County lake resorts. He an- E nounced that slot machines and
- le.
punchboards through which the payoff was in golf balls are taboo.
HOUSING AUTHORITY LEADERS TO MEET
FT. WAYNE, Ind. July 11 (U. P.). —William B. F. Hall, chairman of
|alarms. It was found that “ne DEAD IN SPANISH jever these sirens were placed, false leading to the conviction of a per|fire truck and a streetcar. The truck | Twenty damaged houses, out of a! | both boys and girls—lead the types|killed 110 people and wounded be- | | were next in order. er towns and villages, camping in ry i) rr | (U. P..—Legends of buried pirate sions—such as the broken cradle | edge of the Government canal. Ruins of homes, shops, factories | plosion of a locomotive boiler. | lack of water. might have exploded | and that the entire powder dump (being reduced rapidly) Redettes and Daniel Green
alarms practically have stopped. BLAST PUT AT 10 |son turning in a false alarm. The | was answering a false alarm. total of 2300 which stood here Sun-| of persons turning in false alams.|tween 1500 and 2500. | a, os the fields or wandering still dazed ‘gold and of buried pirates were | | which one woman clutched and the, LBA: still smouldered. Nationalist author- | 0 U # J i LY SA L E 4 AVI N i S! rn Epon: Toemtiors sa 8 a locomotive at Penaranda station, | might then have been exploded. | Slippers excluded
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placed on fire hoxes in areas which show a high percentage of false The City of Chicago has offered la reward of $200 for information |offer was made after a fireman] PENARANDA DE BRACA{was killed in a crash between a MONTE, Spain, July 11 (U. P.).—| The City Managers’ Association |day, remained habitable today after said that children of school age—|a powder deposit explosion which | | Intoxicated persons, mental de-| Wounded were scattered in half a| | fectives and firemen or ex-firemen | dozen towns. Refugees were in oth- | ISLE YIELDS BONES along the roads, carrying odds and | | REHOBOTH BEACH, Del, July 11!ends of furniture and other posses- | | resurrected when a skeleton was dug | empty trunk which a man dragged up on Thompson's Island at the|behind him. ities suggested that the powder blast! might have been caused by the ex- | { Army Engineer investigators, said | | he believed that terrific heat, and The Greatest Shoe Value Event of the Year! [it ini comiouion mish have set s off a 13-ton deposit of trilite powder | . - 49,000 Pairs Nationally Famous Footwear explo ! tan’ y : y Entire Stock—Ladies’, Men's and Children’s Shoes! 8 2 2 . Your Opportunity to Realize Big Savings! due to factory restrictions.
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