Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 3 October 1946 — Page 9
)CT. 3, 1946 :
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| Priority for Meat Cases the district attorney | kf added that “cases of flagrant vio- |
| indiefment. "
GRAND JURY TO HEAR EVIDENCE IN DECEMBER
Flagrant Cases Will Be
Tried Without Waiting U. S. Indictment.
Extending their investigation to othér counties, Indiana district OPA officials today began the preparation of legal reports necessary for the criminal prosecution of a dozen or more alleged violators of meat price regulations,
Following a conference yesterday with U. 8. Distriet- Attorney B, Howard Caughran, the agency's enforcement staff began the methodical ‘task of assembling evidence. This will take about 10 days, it was
«
indicated. { The evidence will be submitted to Mr. Caughran for study. If he feels a criminal violation has occurred, the cases will be presented to the federal grand jury in December, he asserted. . |
|
However,
lation may be prosecuted by in- | formation (affidavit) without wait-| |ing for the grand jury to return an
Mr. Caughran, OPA officials said, | has agreed to give the meat cases priority in his office. As the week-old government in- | quiry continued, OPA investigators reported that violations were “more severe than the ones. we found prior to June 30, when the old OPA law was in effect.” t They said it used to be common to find one or two-cent a pound | overcharges among meat dealers, | Now, overcharges “amount to as much as 100 per cent. Short Weighing Found Hamburger, investigators cited, has a ceiling price of 29 cents a pound; some has sold for as high as 75 cents. | Ft. Wayne is getting special attention, OPA officials said, after al number of complaints were received from consumers there. Short-weighing also has been found. Prosecution on this score, | however, is not within OPA’s jurisdiction and must be assumed by local authorities, it was explained. Likewire, charges that some meat | packers, restaurant and hotel dealers, and others are hoarding meat | and awaiting possible abolition of OPA cannot be investigated by the agency, a spokesman said. a In a recent investigation of this type ordered by Governor Maurice Tobin of Massachusetts, approxi-| mately six million pounds of meat | was Ic located in freezers,
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| Southerner Stops Grant—At Last
MA@ON, .Ga., Oct, 3 (U, PJj— Macon speed cop Fred Singleton should have been around when Yankee Gen. William T. Sherman was making his now famous march through Georgia to the sea. Yesterday officer Singleton stepped in and did what the entire Confetlerate army couldn't do. He stopped Ulysses Grant. Grant, a Negro motorist, was taken technical prisoner here when he ignored a Macon stop light, =
NEW WILLYS UNVEILED TOLEDO, O., Oct. 3 (U, P.).— Willys-Overland today unveiled its post-war 6-70 sedan, a six-cylinder, up-horsepower, “functionally designed” passenger car which Willys officials claim is the first U, 8, auto featuring independent suspension of all four wheels.
. THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
State OPA Pais Meat Violation Cases
|LOCAL MAN DOOMED
FOR KILLING GUARD
AMOSA, Iowa, Oct, 3 (U, P).| -Louis B. Hofer, - 35, Indianapoiis,
murder today in connection with the death last June of an Iowa reformatory guard. A jury deliberated an hour and 40 minutes before recommending the death sentence. Hofer and another reformatory inmate were charged with beating John Hinz, 49, a guard, with a hammer during an escape from the institution. The men were captured |after one of the most extensive {manhunts in Iowa history. The Indianapolis man was serving a 25-year sentenced for robbery and Larson a five-year sentence for larceny, Larson goes on trial Mon-
Menke "Scholarship Established at I. u.
Times State Service
BLOOMINGTON, Ind, Oct, 3.—-
Huntingburg, former Indiana uni-
| versity basketball star who was
killed in a plane crash during the war, will be perpetuated by a scholarship established through gifts by his parents, Mr. and Mrs. W. E. Menke, and the City Securities Corp, of Indianapolis. Earnings on the fund, adminis tered by the Indiana university foundation, will go to the student who most nearly represents the ideals of Lt. Menke, according to terms of the gift. He was killed in a navy plane crash off Puerto Rico in 19045. He had been associated with the City Securities Corp. following his graduation from I U. in 1941.
LAWYER ACCUSED IN'DEATH OF WIFE
WASHINGTON, Oct. 8 (U. P)i—
| The memory of William Menke of Homer R. Hendricks, 46-year-old was found guilty of first degree |
tax attorney, was held in the Rockville, Md., jail. He is charged with shooting to death his wife, Gertrude, 42, in their fashiinable Bethesda, Md., home. Police said Hendricks, well-known in Washington legal circles, admitted firing three shots into his wife's body after an all-night quarrel. He was charged with first degree murder and held without bond.
. UNIFIES REGULATIONS WASHINGTON, Oct. 3 (U. P).— The civilian production administration today unified all regulations on rayon linings under one single order, which also forbids export of
these lining material,
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PAGE 9
Admits Reprisals On Russ Traitors
CHICAGO, Oct. 3 (U. P.).~A Soe viet spokesman has denied reports of a Boviet campaign of terror against Lithuanians, but admitted that reprisals have been taken against “a few war traitors.” Semon Stefanyk, professor of Jurisprudence at. the University of Lviv and a deputy to the supreme Soviet of the U, 8. 8. R,, told the Lawyers’ guild yesterday: “Unfortunately, in some of our republics, during the occupation, there were a few who sided with the Nazis and. became traitors to their country.” “What are you going to do with dogs like that?” Mr. Stefanyk is touring the United States with a delegation of Ukraine ian artists and writers.
Prices Are Plus Fed. Tax
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