Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 9 March 1943 — Page 8
4 Juverie Ad.
line with a general tevision of Javentle delinquency 2 : | William P.
Mewtenant to. supervise the
‘aid division of the Jndian-|
apolis police ‘department. The appointment, recommended Chief Clifford Beeker and approved by the safety board, becomes effective. Thursday. -
Lieut. Charles ‘'E. Weddle, nead of the juvenile aid division since its establishment five years ago. Lieut. Weddle was reduced to the rank of sergeant. Change in the juvenile division's personnel, Chief Beeker said, stemmed from a conference Mon« day between himself, Mayor Tyndall, Juvenile Court Judge Mark Rhoads and City Recreation Supervisor Frank Luzar.
At that time it was decided to co- . ordinate efforts of the juvenile aid division and’ juvenile court “in policy designed to curb - Indianapolis high teen-age delinquency ‘rate.
On Force 23 Years
‘A 23-year veteran of the police department, Sergeant Kurrasch served for two and a half years as a. patrolman and 18 years in: the detective division. He was assigned to the juvenile aid division last year and has been engaged in investigations- of child crime. . _ Patrolmen George Otto Gebhardt and William Gorton were: advanced to detective investigators after Chief Beeker commended them “for _ their fine work in capturing three bandits last week in an East side ~ ‘cafe.’ ’ # # 2
The ‘safety board approved the demotion of four acting investigators “for the good of the department. ” They. are ‘Thomas Hopson, .
Edward Arszman, Francis Griffin
control! paren
advised the rents, hed «The soldiers are Pvts. Adolph Komlane, 22, ‘and Adolph 3 Madley, 27. Pvt, "_ ‘Komlanc is the Pvk Komlane son of Mrs. Agnes Komilane, 732 N. Warman ave. Pvt. Madley is the son of Mr, and Mrs. Frank Madley, 740 N. Warman ave. Both men attended Washington high school and both were inducted into service in October, 1941. Pvt. Komlanc worked as a clerk in the grocery operated by Pvt. Madley’s father. Pvt. Madley : worked at the Slovenians’ National home.
MAZE OF SUITS FOLLOWS RAIDS
-|Rahke Firms File - Action
Seeking Return of Seized Property. (Continued from Page One)
raiding methods would be made conform with court decisions. Judge W. D. Bain, of criminal court, yesterday ruled that Joe Mitchell, well-known Indiana ave. cafe cperator, was arrested illegally by police last week during a raid on his restaurant.
The judge held that a quantity of alleged lottery tickets seized at Mitchell's cafe, 408 Indiana sve, Feb. 3 could not be used as. legal evidence because they® were taken without a search warrant and without police first seeing any law violations in the place. Mitchell was found not guilty of
Mediterranean. oe
Invasion Proof. MADRID, March. 9 TB) —
[second front in Europe_ have in-| [creased greatly in the last 10 days.
Special teams of engineers were
|said to be rushing defenses ‘along th coastline, |
the southern European chiefly in France, Italy and Greece, and on the beaches of Sardinia and Sicily. ; The fortifications were described as identical in principle to those set up by the Nazis on the English channel and Atlantic coasts of France. It was pointed out that the axis aim is to make the entire Mediterranean coast invasion-proof. Existing French defenses on the Riviera also were reported being re-
vised and strengthened, while German engineers. ‘were - supervising}
28,000 Italian laborers in . building pillboxes and" other forts in Sicily, Sardinia, Corsica and various vital Italian points. Axis engineers in Greece were said to be drawing plans for fortifying many islands at the approaches to Salonika.
U. S. PILOTS SCORE IN. NORTHERN BURMA
NEW DELHI, March 9 (U. P)— American fighter planes, using machine guns and light bombs, harassed enemy installations in northern Burma yesterday, a 10th air force headquarters communique sald today. Bombs were dropped on Maingkwan, approximately 300 miles north of Mandalay, starting fires. Enemy ground positions were strafed and that village was bombed. A large building was destroyed. On'March 6, fighters attacked Indaw, approximately 160 miles north of Mandalay, starting fires, while on March 7 medium bombers resumed
and Cecil London. All were re- a charge of “keeping a room for their attack on the Gokteik viaduct
- duced to patrolmen. : Two patrolmen, Oss Woodall and Thomas Low, were promoted to the rank of acting investigators.
RUSS PLANE BUILDING UP LONDON, March 9 £U. P.).—The - Soviet newspaper ‘Pravda reported ~ today that Russian aircraft produc- - tion in 1942 increased 75 percent “over the previous year, the News- . Chronicle said,
pool gelling.” Police officers admitted they had no search warrant and that they broke open a .cabinet to get the tickets after Mitchell refused to open it voluntarily.
Pertains to Future
“There was no testimony that police saw any law violations in
with powerful bombs. Three hits were scored at the base of the vital Japanese span. All planes returned safely.
the cafe and seizure of evidence}
in that case without a warrant was clearly illegal,” Judge Bain said.
Meanwhile, Judge Walter Pritch-|_
ard of superior court 4 made permanent an injunction he issued
- | against police two weeks ago in con-
*| Publishing Co, ’ in the
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nection with the raid and seizure of property of the Capitol . City Lemcke building. The tunchion perely restrain police from ‘interfering illegally in the future with the firm’s operations. The order has no effect upon the legal status of the raid already made on the place.
Replevin Suit! Pending
A replevin suit to test the legality of the raid is pending in superior court 5. .Pending this litigation, Judge Ralph Hammill permitted seized property to be returned to the eompany which _was put under bond to guarantee su
LE me
der of the}
property for evidence in the event|
the raid is held legal. Mayor Tyndall said any adverse court rulings against ®police would not in any way stop police from continuing their drive against vice in Indianapolis. “We may get many adverse rulings: but our. campaign ‘ against gambling. will be continued,” he said. - “If the procedures we have been following in some cases has
not been correct, we will adopt new|
procedures.” Machines Returned Judge Bain’s ruling in the Mitch-
.| ell case followed a similar deeision
‘he handed down two weeks ago when he held that seizure of some pinball machines witliout search warrants was illegal’ and ordered the devices returned to the owner.
Judge Bain explained that hej:
has interpreted the law fo mean that no evidence can be seized le- -| gally without a Search warrant unless officers first see the property being used in violation of the law.
“If an officer sees property being!
used illegally he can seize it with-! out ‘a ‘warrant but not otherwise,” Judge Bain said.
DELAY
I TISTRY
0D > JAA
x AT A V
call ‘em
| “coud: Sopa
trical,’ Radio and. Machine Work: ers, C. IO. :
WILLIAM 'L. HUTCHESON;
president) of‘ the ‘United Brotherhood of Carpenters and Joiners. ang ast vice president of the A. A)
ing Workers, who had been electeda C. £5. eee oi > month, betare. » ’ 4 : ily Ce a
‘from A. F. of 'L. t0/C'1.-O. The’ AP. of L. conferees were * Vice: President Charles J. ‘McGowan,
DANIEL J. TOBIN, president’ chinists
of the International Brotherhood
of Teamsters and sixth vice president of the A. F. of L...
HARRY 'C. BATES, president:
of “the ' Bricklayers’, Mason and Plasterers’ I..'U. A. and. seventh vice president of the A. F. of Lo 2 8 t J
Byrnes. Steps In
“PRINCIPALLY THE secret
agreement was: to. devaiop later
as the legal excuse by which: was authorized to
the C. IL O. continue its’ raid upon the mem-
bership of the A. F. of L. unions. |
-steamfitters, all of whose unions Were directly concerned ‘with the ‘Kaiser dispute. This A.-F. of L. delegation: de-
‘vantage; since in ‘the entire Us 8. and associated. Ane
Sushiss, » AF
- “This was answered by. thie colt,
|: conservative. sarcasm of John ¥. | Frey, presijent of the A. F. of 1. | Mata) Teac Count speaking t) ‘Hutcheson = Said he, “You must +] sve Teen, awtully, salve, “BilL”
“Tomerroyr—How agreement was ratified 3 ae A. F. of L executive cou Kaiser production efficiency imeantime dropping 1) per cent lhecause of labor tur-' moil.
_ LLOYD ‘GEORGE IL
own resources rather than acknowl- suspend. lal. read, price
edge help from any one, he said; [coal : America Knows Facts 3 =p
Well, there is no question the rembving people in America know ‘the facts Fie! Eb
and here the, people don’t.” ; * LONDON, March 9 (U.P) —Lloyd| = Standley warned that the ‘Amet-
a and
George, who is confined to hig hore ican. congress was a sensitive group.
at Churt, Stirrey, with a slight chill,|
- “They
are generous and big- 2
was. reported. much better today. hearted so long as they feel that}.
He was prime rid -
membership. of over a |
Sg neta “while the 0. 1.70; unions claimed only 260,000.
On‘ thé ‘west coast, A Foof L |
claimed 400,000 while C. I.
inthe three’ Portland; Ofe.. area |
.shipyards operated | by: Henty =|
Kaiser.
A..F. of 1. unions’ had negotiated -union shop agreements with the Kaiser yards. But the. C. 1. O,, frozen out of this lucrative field and unable .to- organize it, had. protested to thé national” labor relations board and had
. petitioned for the right to hold
an election among the Kaiser em= ployees fo. determine which union:
‘should be the bargaining agent.
A few days after announcement of the peace and unity agreement of Dec. 2, James K. Byrnes,
director; of’ economic: stabilization,’
called a meeting of another group of labor leaders. The purpose of: this second conference was to try:
~to end the jurdisdictional dispute:
of C. I. O. sald fa: Tani, Green |
consult ‘his executive coungil. : . A second conference was ar.
‘ranged, and Green came back |
with. the report that his executive
‘committee would not authorize |.
“him. to sign a no-raiding- agreement." Then he pulled. his tfump -card.s He flashed the under-cover, unpublished unity agreement with sthe fourth paragraph referring to “legal rights” Under the Wagner act, C. I. O. had a right to or= -ganize any place if wanted to. : sn “Row Still Rankles THERE WAS consternation and’ ‘confusion. among ‘the A. F. of L.
metal ‘trades’ delegates. - Net hay-;
ing" participated: in “the -
these orld, lene gilder piles ‘of the’ Army Air Force. Like so many Americans, they're learning: an a siely new job—and proving. they’ve got what it takes.
| solis( Bilvs the same all along the line—on the home front, too,’ millions. - gt ate proving that good old American “know how” just can’t; be beat! And that-goes for cigarettes, too. For when you take costlier tobaccos and that priceless “know how” - of blending. that produce a slow-burning: cigarette, you’ ve. got the cigarette for steady smoking pleasure Try Camels yourself-—you’'ll find: they giveyo Plesture dh that Ads ps pack al after pak: ck.
/ MILDNESS AND R RICH FLAVOR CAMELS HAVE
WHAT IT TAKES! . THEY SUIT ME
minister during they are belping someone,” ‘he’ said, 3
COAST GUARD, THE: FAVORITE * CIGARETTE: 18: CAMEL (akSen ON
‘they a are’ « fighting the a 4 ase
