Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 26 September 1941 — Page 5
"FRIDAY, SEPT. 2, 1941
| POLICE WARNING
IS GIVEN "CYCLISTS
‘Wheels to Be Seized From Reckless Youngsters on
- Authority of Judge
Bradshaw Acting on
Parent-Teachers’ Suggestion.
Bicycles of all juveniles caught violating traffic laws or riding through the streets recklessly will be impounded by police under special orders of Juvenile Court Judge Wilfred
Bradshaw.
The decision to seize bicycles of offenders was reached
after a conference between Judge Bradshaw, Police Chief
Michael Morrissey, Sheriff Al Feeney, Mrs. Sheldon Goodwin, chairman of the Indianapolis Parent-Teacher Council Safety
Committee, and Dr. R. N. Harger, chairman of the Chamber of Commerce Safety Committee, late yestreday. The conference was called by
Judge Bradshaw to act upon a
safety resolution adopted Wednesday by the Parent-Teacher Council.
Recommended by P.-T. A.
Impounding of bicycles of offenders was one of the recommendations contained in the P.-T. A. resolution. Judge Bradshaw issued a formal order authorizing both Chief Morrissey and Sheriff Feeney to confiscate the bicycles and hold them for various periods to be fixed. by . the Judge. ot e P.-T. A. resolution urged a . general “cracking down” on youthful traffic violators and both enforcement officials and Judge Bradshaw agreed to lend full co-opera-tion. Fines and Classes Urged Mrs. Goodwin assured enforcement officers that anything they do “will have the full backing of all parents.” : . The P.-T. A. recommended further that juveniles convicted of traffic violations should be fined and ordered to attend traffic safety classes for three nights. Judge Bradshaw and Chief Morrissey opposed the fining of juveniles on the ground that parents had to pay the fines, imposing no hard- . ship or punishment on the young offender. 3
Agree on Revocation
Judge Bradshaw said a more effective punishment for flagrant juvenile violators is revocation of their driver’s license for 30 days.
Sheriff Feeney and Chief Morrissey agreed that the revocation policy was better than fines. 5 Enforcement officers commended P.-T. A. leaders for their organization of a campaign to urge parents of all school-age children to co-
operate with officers in the camaign. “Co-operation of all parents can do more good than all the enforcement work we can do,” Sheriff Feeney said. “In so’ many homes parents’ pay little attention to the activities of their children.” Judge Bradshaw said he will prepare a schedule of the various
{periods bicyeles of offenders are to
be held by police. In serious cases bicycles | may be held at Police Headquarters for as long as a month. Any bicycle seized will be held at least one week, Judge Bradshaw warned. ?
STATE C. I. 0. UNITY MEETINGS PLANNED
A series of meetings throughout the state to outline a “program of united action” was planned today by Indiana C. I. O. officials following their first conference last night with Powers Hapgood, new regional director. The sessions will be held in Gary, South Bend, Muncie, Evansville and other cities. Twenty-five delegates representing various C. I. O. affiliates attended last night's meeting here. “The need for united labor action in the political field was among the subjects discussed,” Walter Frisbie, secretary of the Indiana Industrial Union Council, said. “We decided to remember who our friends are and those who profess to be our friends but are not. But no partisan politics was discussed.” He said the group had “reached a clear understanding of our objectives” and that the state meetings would serve to co-ordinate the groups’ future actions.
KNOX VISITS BERMUDA
BERMUDA, Sept. 26 (U. P.)— Navy Secretary Frank Knox inspected the United States base here
today.
GEORGE SHEAD ON ACTIVE DUTY
Assigned to Marine Corps; Two Local Men Win Navy Promotions..
Second Lieut. George IL. Shead, son of Mrs. A. M. Shead, Spink Arms Hotel, is to be assigned to active duty with the U. S. Marine Corps following his graduation from
officers’ training school at Quantico, Va. Lieut. Shead, a graduate of DePauw University, enlisted in the Marine Corps as a candidate for a reserve commission in January. He was sent to Quantico for a fourmonths course from which he was graduated in May. He was then commissioned a second lieutenant.
Navy Promotes Two
TWO INDIANA men in the U. 8. Navy have been pramoted. Lester H. Mosson, 1341 W. Michigan St., has been appointed to the Naval Dental Corps with the rank of lieutenant, junior grade. Robert Julian Reising of Evansville, has been advanced to a Naval Aviation Cadet upon the completion of his preliminary flying course.
22 DOLLS PRESENTED TO RILEY HOSPITAL
Twenty - two dolls, representing characters in the poems of James itcomb ' Riley, have been presented to Riley Hospital by ' the Greenfield Kiwanis Club. The dolls are the work of Mrs. Mildred Davis of Greenfield. The Kiwanis Club also presented the Hospital six plaques. 3 :
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H] DTAN
U.S. WAR
Relationship May Change in | Day or Week, Roosevelt Writes in Collier's.
By LYLE C. WILSON United Press Staff Correspondent
WASHINGTON, Sept. 25.—United States relationship to the war is on a|24 hours basis—or less—President Roosevelt said today in a Collier's article which charged Republican -and Democratic opponents of his neutrality policies with hastening outbreak of the conflict. He referred also to the existing “so-called” Neutrality Act which the Administration now seeks to change or abandon. Mr. Roosevelt assessed blame against practically all Congressional Republicans and some 25 per cent of Democrats who prevented repeal of the arms embargo clause of the Neutrality Act in July and August of 1939. Since that brink of war period, he said, the American people have abandoned “strict neutrality and aloofness.” |
Article Written in July
The magazine article, written last July and now published, appears only 48 hours after revelation that the Administration probably shortly will ask for further Neutrality Act changes to permit arming American flag merchant vessels. Mr. Roosevelt pledged all American ‘“resources, industry and manpower”, to the job of re-armament and to| “help to the limit” the anti-Axis states. ; : Hee “International events have happened so quickly,” he wrote, “that it is impossible to tell exactly: what the relationship of the United States Land its people to this world conflict will be next week, or tomorrow or, indeed, before the ink on this page will have dried.” : The first Neutrality Act repeal proposal since Mr. Roosevelt's revelation that he wants to arm American flag ships was offered yesterday by Senator Kenneth McKellar (D. Tenn.). ‘The President has promised to decide next week whether to ask for repeal or modification. of the act but, meantime, is proceeding with the arming of at least part of the 125 American-owned merchant vessels which fly the Panamanian flag and, therefore, are exempt from Neutrality Act restrictions. The Collier's article reviews ‘futile American efforts for peace from 1933 to the outbreak of the war.
Saw War on Way in ’39
The. policies which to date have brought the United States to the point of arming its merchantmen, leasing or lending war materials to anti-Axis nations, and the epochal “shoot-on-sight” orders issued to the Navy a fortnight ago, began to develop in October, 1937. Mr. Roosevelt recalls the “quarantine the aggressors” speech he made in Chicago at that time. But the big political contest be-
Roosevelt asked for repeal of the arms embargo section of the Neutrality Act. He had signed the original Neutgality Act but now writes “I havé regretted my action.” ph { By the spring of 1939, Mr.-Roose-velt reveals, “it hadgbecome clear beyond question ‘that war was on ‘the way. ;
JAP DIET MEMBER HITS PACT WITH AXIS
CHICAGO, Sept. 26 (U. P.).—Dr. Juiji G. Kasai, member. of the lower house of the Japanese diet, said last night that Japan should “reorient” its policy toward the Axis and expressed doubt that the Japanese navy would be used “as a catspaw of a third power to fight against America.” Dr. Kasai told a University of Chicago alumni group that neither the United States nor Japan wanted war in the Pacific. A graduate of
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in the 1939 abrogation of the commercial treaty between the’ two nations and forced Japan “to the conclusion that it was almost impussible to retain America’s friendship.’ “This abrogation of the commercial’ treaty gave me a great shock,” he said. “It has accelerated the forces which were driving Japan to Hitler and which, unfortunately, re-
partite treaty.” : Kasai called the pact which allied Japan with the Axis’ a “mere defense treaty” with “loopholes.”
H any A. Burkart To Attend U. of C.
HARRY A. BURKART JR. Technical High School’s highest ranking grad- pris id uate last June, was to leave this week-end for the University of Chicago, where he has a scholarship. ] Harry is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Harry A. ? 4
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Burkart Sr., 415 N. Irving. o . ton Ave. r. kat Bids Mr. Bmian purchasing agent for the Kroger Grocéry and Baking Co. Harvard University also offered a scholarship to the ranking Tech graduate, who topped a field of 1118 pupils. for the honor. He received a faculty medal and a certificate from Phi Beta Kappa fraternity. He had served as commander of the Technical Legion, and had been president of the Latin and Social Science clubs.
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