Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 31 October 1941 — Page 14

port Drop in Vandalism FILE SURPRISE Near Halloween Zero Hour

Police and deputy sheriffs crossed] repeated his warning that the po- ; fingers, sighed a little as they] lice may charge parents of chil-| 2 d ed at last night's vandalism re-| dren caught in acts of vandalism| G. 0. P. Council Candidate 8, and awaited the zero hour of | with child neglect. : ion Halloween’ tonight. The deputies received reports that Brings Second Action i They were heartened considerably|rocks and cans were thrown on On “Skip” Law. en they observed that only four|porches in Rowena Ave. a window LS J es of vandalism were reported in| was broken in a home on Iris Ave. (Continued from Page One) » county, with only one resulting| things were thrown on porches in|iginal aetion and file another suit jin property damage, and only three Washburn St, and windows were|in another court within a few days. fagases reported in the city, all off “city police reported that a win-|servers as an attack on City Hall “them resulting in property damage. dow was broken at 547 Rochester|Democrats who have been accused Also, there was one false fire(St, a window was broken at 212|of trying to delay the legal test of «alarm turned in, from E. St. Clair| W. Ray St. and mortar was smeared the law to determine if Indianapo- ; on a house at 3958 Fletcher Ave.[lis will have a municipal election '8t. and the Belt R. R. A 16-year-old boy was caught in|next year. : ~ Nevertheless, Lieut. Charles Wed-| connection with the latter and sent| William B. Miller, attorney who dle of the Juvenile Aid Department,! to Juvenile Aid. } : filed the new suit for Mr. Stude- : i vant, said “it looks like Mayor Sul

livan and City Hall officials would like to hold their offices permanently ”»

The Studevant suit is almost the same as the first action filed by two other candidates for the City Council; . one a Democrat and the other a Republican. The first suit was prepared by both Democratic and Republican attorneys. However, last week Edward Knight, City Corporation ' Council, filed a motion tc remove Circuit

'KINNEY’S WEEK-END

PECIALS

soaped at a home at 2902 Brille Rd.| The new action was seen by ob-|.

; Hairdres |

Liquor Board Signs Lease ~ For 5 Years at Rental Of $800 a Menth.

The Alcoholic

Commission obtained option for an additional five years’

rental of the floor space. : Remodeling Planned One of the featured hairdressers of the fourth annual convention of the Indiana Hairdressers and : Cosmetologists’ Association, Inc, [the Stout Liquor Law; which grea

Beverages Commission today ended its threemonth quest for larger quarters by signing a five-year lease with the Illinois and Market Realty Co. for of the second floor of the uilding, Illinois and Market

tion was handled by

at the Hotel Lincoln Sunday, [expanded its personnel, went in Monday and Tuesday, will be Miss |effect last May. mmission Helen Templeman of Kansas City.

Miss Templeman will give demon- |p15,50 and Commission officials

first and second floors of the State|known athlete. He was captain of say the U. 8. , team strations Monday. Sunday’s guest |it will be a great advantage to have |in the ne oy in|, artist will be Charles Bock, New |the entire staff located on one floor. the lightweight class. He had been The new quarters are being re-|in command of the Reuben James -

S. Destroyer

# A

r Torpedoed : | 50-YEAR |

Victor J. Spits, 67-

York Central passenger

cause this country to sever its already-strained diplomatic ductor, retired today after relations with the Nazi Government. Mr. Roosevelt replied |of railroading. Al 1:35

ne a Tis. a rolled into Indianapolis from that he had not heard of that possibility; that the inter-| I “0 170 TASH alle

Pew Ee Relatives surprised’ him Announcement of the sinking followed by a few hours a station ind then went to he

SEN Of lhe 51 a 3348 N. Capitol, for a dint communique from Berlin saying that a destroyer |} N. Capitol, for a din Mr. Spitz was born in

national situatioh remains unchanged.

had been sunk recently at some undisclosed place. That| Berlin announcement did not give the nationality of the destroyer. aE : ge

tical with 20 of the 50fand no casualties overage destroyers that were

Cuba on Nov. 30, 19390 but dD oka ; 9 . 30, 9 but was|their job to app e : The Reuben Jamies was pulled free without serious damage |each car when stopping the & . : “From brakeinan, Mr, According to the letters of one|vanced through the stages of : sallor aboard the Reuben James to| man, freight train conducte

traded to Britain for Atlantic|nis parents in Vero Beach, Fla, the | four years ago he became

bases. With four stacks and low|oltl destroyer had already made|tor on passenger

trains -of

: : .|three convoy trips to Iceland. Guy|C, & St. L. He has been decks, she presented the same sil (Gene Evans wrote on Oct. 11 that|company 40 years.

During his career he had k

several wrecks but rece

ous injury. Lieut. Comm. Edwards, a native San Saba, Tex, was a well-

——— i --

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Judge Earl R. Cox from the bench on the ground that the judge already had made up his mind that the 1941 election law ‘is unconstitutional. Mr. Knight ;alsa charged that the suit was the wrong kind of legal action. * ‘Mr. Knight's action brought charges that the City Hall Democrats were attempting to stall a legal test of the law, thus giving them another year in office without: an’ election. The Studevant suit filed today charged that Clerk Ettinger and the County Election Board have agreed. to deprive Indianapolis voters of their right to elect a mayor next year. The suit states that the 1941 skip. election law which postpones until 1943 municipal elections in all cities but Indianapolis is unconstitutional, on the ground that a repeal clause leaves no law under which this

FRENCH ‘STRIKE IS BRITISH TEST

Vichy Says 5-Minute Work Stoppage Failed; Radio Talks ‘Jammed.’

LONDON, Oct. 31 (U.P.). — The British radio summoned the people of France today to a five-minute protest strike against German execution of French hostages. -

The call was issued by Gen. Charles de Gaulle with a final

modeled and probably will be ready |since April 6, 1940. Previously he for occupancy in mid-December. |had served aboard submarines of

Includes Janitor Service Te Phens Blett. Cr Ge ews e sinking was g Bernard E. Doyle, commission withheld from Mrs. Edwards at . ewport, R. I, until it was certain company will furnish janitor serv-|gpether’ he had gone down with joo and: inetall = ventilaling s¥- pis ship, Mrs. Bdwards' brother, . Lieut. . R. B. Ellis, is in -1 When the ABC moves out of the| .. 4 Comp. R. | destroyer Som State House, a scramble is expected ihe North Atlantic patrol. by other departments for the va-| _ Named for te Fighter

cant office space. The Reuben James was one of

'MOSKINS |

YOUR DOLLAR - KING)

The ABC operates on revenue

Stained p Oweh a lado lax 156 flush-deck destroyers that were ——————————————— built during the World War period but were not commissioned until

WARNS AGAINST after the Armistice. She 'was capa-

! é | ? {ble of 35 knots and had a -mile FDR AS ‘KERENSKY’ |e ot | A warning that “destroyers of our|- The ship was named in honor of independence” are entrenched in|Reuben James, a boatswain’s mate in

the U. 8. Navy, who took ‘part in the : Government - ‘and waiting a the war against the Coast

City could hold an election.

The suit states that the 1933 election law, providing for a 1942 elec-

broadcast a few minutes before the |propitious moment to make Presistrike deadline by the mysterious|dent Roosevelt a Kerensky was “Col. V. Britton” — British radio|sounded last night by A. R. Young

pirates and saved the life of Capt. Stephen Decatur by interposing his body between that of his com-

SIZES 41 to 8 BLACK SUEDES AND PATENTS

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tion for Indianapolis, is still in full |Propagandist for the V-for-victory

force and effect. These are the same points of law

campaign on the Continent. "(The United Press listening post

to the America First Committee of |mander and the scimitar of a pirate - Indianapolis here. while engaged in a battle with Mr. Young, an engineer and a|pirate gunboats, - James also went!

set up by the first suit, which was|in New York reported that the native of England but a naturalized [into harbor when the American

prepared by Joseph Daniels and Ed McClure, Republicans, and Floyd Mattice, a Democrat,

However, these lawyers announced | 324

earlier this week that because of Mr. Knight's opposition, they would file a companion suit seeking a declaratory judgement in one of the superior courts, and indicated that they would dismiss their Circuit Court suit. Mr. Studevant and Mr. Miller are publishers of “The Transcript,” a Republican pamphlet representing a faction of the Marion County Republican party. ‘

FRENCH BID FOR U.S. FOOD FOR PRISONERS

British broadcasts directed to France were heavily “jammed,” presumably by interference of French German transmitters. : Vichy correspondents reported that they saw. no evidence of qbservance of the strike in Vichy).

Information to Be Slow

The British believed it might be several days before they could get enough information to know how effective the 5-minute strike call had

“At 4 p. m. (9 a. m, Indianapolis Time) all of France will stand erect and during these five decisive minutes show that despite insult, torture, treachery and tears, she is preparing for vengeance under her tattered flags,” a broadcast by Gen.

American, urged that, in order to|forces boarded and destroyed the frustrate this move, the people|frigate Philadelphia which had : should insist “upon proper. respect|fallen into the hands of the Corfor our Constitutional form of gove sairs. ernment from every member of the r Administration, from the President Went Aground in 1939 on down.” ] It ‘was the second mishap to be-| fall the Reuben James since the U. 8. Navy began its patrol activi-

PARADE TO MARK ties. After the war began the ship ALL AMERICAN DAY |6rounded oft the north coast of

An “All American's Day Parade”| ,,, o will precede a patriotic celebration| Kiss in Movie

Sunday at the Keystone Center of the National Youth Administration. Causes A vost VENICE, Italy, Oct. 31 (U. P) —

The Tilman H. Harpole Post, No. 249, of American Legion will head A young doctor and his pretty ‘assistant were arrested for kiss-

the march. Many organizations,

LARGE ASSORTMENT OF BEAUTIFUL

veterans”

| buy 13000 tons of food a month |to the people of his fatherland.

WASHINGTON, Oct. 31 (U.P) — |Charles de Gaulle, the Free French|R. O. T. C. units and more than ce. : the British radio, |500 youths working on national deFrance is seeking an agreement to |leader, said over 3% Jouthe Working co hational de. from the United ‘States for French| “France will line up with her whole | tindale Ave. and march to the Keywar prisoners in Germany and oc- soul awaiting the day when she|Stone Center for the program at cupied France, it was learned today.|will march with her whole strength|3:30 p. m.

ing in a movie theater. -After a night in jail they were fined by a judge, who explained that Italian law permits public kissing only in railroad stations.

CE

1 $3.00 DELIVERS

Negotiations were understood to|toward victory.”

be going on here and at Vichy. That much food would be two pounds monthly for each of 1,300, prisoners. ‘ France's own lack of food and the prospect of a severe shortage this winter was said to be responsible for new efforts to get American food. France would pay cash for the food and would transport it in her own vessels to Marseilles. It would be distributed under American Red

{| Cross supervision.

It was said that France now csn send her prisoners only two pounds of food a month, compelling them to depend for the rest on Germany’s limited larder.

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Et

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Za ZN

Called as Protest The strike was called by de Gaulle in protest against the execution of 100 French hostages at Nantes and Bordeaux in Jepreal for the assassination of two German army officers and the threatened execution of 100 others if the assassins are not cap-

But the results of the call will be closely observed in order to .determine the va'ue of such methods in future “disciplining” and “training” of the masses of the peoples of occupied countries from Norway to Greece in preparation for eventual revolt against the German conerors. ; . Such an uprising, it has been emphasized, would be a mistake if it came too soon and lost its force

before there was hope of a British]

invasion attempt or other coordinated war action to support the rebels. As a result, the ability of the refugee government leaders in London to control and direct their peoples by radio may be of decisive importance.

POLICEMAN'S SON INJURED IN GRASH

Someone phoned Police Head-

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