Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 5 March 1943 — Page 3

Afnesions ‘remark that this

| T— ene | WEDNESDAY AFTERNOON you couldnt fd + Demonte | "5, Te Counsel for Printing Firm Claims Beeker and Safety] he wasnt vicoaiy roliog in te aies ves fhe lobby EE oR | Board. With Ignoring Injunction Issued finals to impress Upon She pps House embers Si Sesire | ok atom] 4 In. 1935. - They thought that vas the funnest ting they had ever heard of. st fa gas a they 2 ie. harman | st, they hoped 0) A : Police Chief Clifford Beeker and members of the ‘safety Ralph" Gates and House Speaker Les We ve been cited to appear in circuit court next Mon-| Hobart Creighton on. the: floor of Republicans Get Turn 11 a.m. “to show cause why they should not be pun- WELL. ‘AS 15 usually the case; contethpt of court,” in a petition filed by the J. L. the tables were turnel within Printing Co., 420 E. Ohio st. less than 24 hours. e citation filed yesterday by Edward H. Knight, form- Os ReaTE Shak ON | U Seusier, Yon A 1 Eiotihorn ior = ‘corporation counsel, in behalf of the MacDaniel firm,| Just created great consternation. in

that, when the police raided the firms plant last

d in the citation were William ‘and Smiley N. Chambers.

: firm was legal in order to escape penalty on the contempt charge. Mentwitle the city filed a municl: pal court complaint against. the| company, requesting an for confiscation and destruction of gambling equipment allegedly Jound at the printing house in the|

Faid. hearing on the action, first of {ts kind to be instituted in the current anti-gaming campaign, will be

held by Judge John L. Niblack in|

} municipal court 4 next Monday. : Sidney Miller, city corporation counsel, said what would correspond to several truckloads of lottery and pool tickets were now being guarded at the printing company -by a police detail. Evidence Lacking

He pointed out that raiding officers had desisted from confiscating the material’“on the spot” because . there was no evidence that the . tickets had been used for gambling purposes on the premises, He added, however, that police|: had obtained “conclusive evidence” . that the tickets had been sold to pool operators. Vice officers are holding samples of 61 varieties of . Jotidry and. _pool slips, Mr, Miller

ok seid ‘Also among ‘the evidence; he declared, is a printing catalog listing - merchandise allegedly sold by the company for gambling purposes: He said that the court petition was against the corporation only; ,. and that no charges had been preferred against officials of the firm.

Cite Recent Decisions

“Certain recent court decisions,” - he said, “make it doubtful whether ‘we could obtain convictions against

manded return of property con- ‘| fiscated by police in the raid on their offices in the Lemcke building 1ast week. The suit also asked $1000 damages. : The partiiers charged tn the sult that the property, which included

ment valued at $500, is being held as evidence in police storage rooms. Chief Beeker at the time of the raid said the publishing company ‘was headquarters for horse race petting ‘syndicates throughout the

< Middlewest.

The sult charged that seizure of

be returned tely. A hearg| 38 Biss 106 ben Sct by Jusge Ralph

Individuals - Noad Cash to Help Rebuild in Peace,

He Tells Realtors.

Asserting that the Indiana legislature had entirely too much work to do in 61 days, Speaker Hobart Creighton of the house of representatives told the Indianapolis Real Estate board yesterday. he ‘I would nevertheless “like fo see it take on one more job.”

a post-war program and give some thought to limiting the federal income tax to 25 per cent,” he said. “If we are going to have any work based on planning done after the war, we've got to leave enough money in you men’s pockets and other -people’s pockets. fo pay for it. “We can’t leave all these things up to Washington.” He said that governments which looked after everybody’s interests— the “haves” as well as the: “have nots”"—was the most desirable kind of government, and he would like to see more people expressing their opinions to state and federal lawmakers,

Cites New Problems

Referring directly to a movement to have state legislatures petition congress to limit income taxation to

the proprietors, in view of the fact|25 per cenf, and to take state ad-

we have no proof that they engaged in actual ‘gaming transactions on the

‘premises.” Mr. Miller said the president of the MacDaniel firm is R. N. Throck- - morton, 4824 E. New York st. .

Suit Demands Return Of Seized Equipment The first civil action to test the legality of Police Chief Beeker’s seizure of valuable equipment in

. gambling raids has been filed in _ Superior Court 5.

The suit, brought by John J. and.

Harry Gorman, partners operating the Capital City Publishing Co., de-

vice on postwar planning, he said: “If state legislatures are convinced of these things and act ac-

will just have to follow.” “Conditions are 10 times more complicated ‘and every legislature

in 1851 they didn’t know we would ever have.” He mentioned automobiles, airplanes, welfare departments and social security as subjects which were unheard of in 1851 but which take up a great deal of the legislature’s time nowadays. But despite the multitude of bills before it, the legislature will finish all its business on time, he said.

IN INDIANAPOLIS

maTIONING DATES

pon 11 is jood for three

ugh March 1 upon i good nll March 21.

Irene Alexander, at 2197 Gal f le Sy Soups =Coupen, 3 good for four Nathanicl, Elizabeth Gore, at 818 P le 4 good oe 11 gallons A gas Books George P. Sturm, 75, at Central, arterioHai Gordon, 53, at Methodist, pneu-|

: "rough Apt 1. = I for iiders of Yeh 31.

2 good for one pair

Fil TODAY 3 ns, board of | Dora

= si Bo

pm

30 pin, , Hotel Wash-

Choir, concert, orld) teriosel s : UN ed Ea Able, 10, at 804 N, Missouri, carci

Rev. James, Alice Morgan, a t Methodist. a gor, ot Melnodier. Walter, Mary Deer, at 2118 8S. New

DEATHS

Josephine Marce oP Sfarce a. “Hoffman, 69, at 1007

| Joyce Wi oner, “at Het Methodist, carcinoma. Paul Williams, 62, at city, pulmonary Matilda Waltz, , at City, arterioscle-

Dora ay, 57, at Methodist, uremia.

imi. Liven ood, 43, (hepatitis. good, at City, Scute ; a Rodgers ley ager ,. 40, ab Central, Lula Silton, 66, at 1829 Boulevard pl. cerebral lexy. Norma Ji EE baugh, 9, at City, acute

william am Russell, 60, at 1308 W. 22d, ar-

ety Owens, 15, at Riley, tuberculous

| Alice Grass, 80, at 4708 Kingsley, pneu-}

te Freda J. W Wagner, 57. 1 84.1433 N. : Pentisyli Afar” A Grove, ‘ob. at

Pulmonary tu! Langworsh

beroulogis, Netie inne Zympe, at City, Farr

=U. 8. Weather Bureau _

extensive communications equip-|

the property was illegal and should}

= CREIGHTON ASKS| 25% TAX LIMIT

“State legislatures should adopt :

cordingly, the federal government

has to consider many things which}

John Frederi rick, at Methodist, | -

blunder that could be made.” (At

STRAUSS SAYS s 60

MEN’S CLOTHING THIRD FLOOR

‘MEN'S HATS AND: "FOOTWEAR FIRST. FLOOR :

MEN'S SHIRTS, - “Es, SOCKS "and SPORTSWEAR _ FIRST FLOOR |

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STORE HOURS SATURDAY 9:20 TILL 6

STORE HOURS MONDAY = ‘12:15 TILL 8: 28

ATURDAY will be a tremendous] active day— Perhaps we should start. off with a “firecracker” headline . + jump up and down. . . "and tell

you to rush in for pee values—and that sort of

Zz.

~ But—we just want to put. down quictly—witiout

heat—these. few words—

“THE MAN'S STORE i is distinctly and thoroughly man, .

The clothes are comple stely masculine i in taste and fashion i the tailoring | is sincere . . . the fabrics wilstentiel. :

The services in selling and fitting are-after a man’s own

: “heart . as - helpful—knowledged-—courtecus. RL

It’s not a mere lip courtesy—not slick phrases that come out of a book—but something that comes deep, from the

7S

Man’ Ss Store background and its way of Tfe,

“The. surroundings are informal and snannishesnob Cluttered with ruffles or amour pajamas with diamond buttons, or sno nod:

The Man’ s Store i is as alert to Economy'a as it is to the: Quality and Character of i its s clothes . ie