Indianapolis Times, Volume 42, Number 83, Indianapolis, Marion County, 15 August 1930 — Page 15
AUG. 15, 1930
LIFT 25 MILES OF DETOURS ON STATEROADS Oil Is Spread on Many Highways, According to Weekly Bulletin. Twenty-five miles of detour were eliminated on state highways this week, according to the bulletin Issued today by the state highway department. Road oil was spread on the following highways : State road 1, from Connersvllle to Brookville; Road 18. from Marion east to Roll; Road 29, from Versailles to Madison; Road 32, from Anderson to the Boone county line; Road 46, from Nashville to Columbus, and Road 56, from Madison to the OhioSwitzerland county line. General road conditions were listed in the bulletin as follows: rto*d 7—Closed between Wirt ind North Vernon. Th rough traffic detour over state roads. Indianapolls-Madison traffic go via road 29. Road 9—Detour nine mile* north ot Greenfield to lunctlon with road 67 Is seven miles. Bridge run-arounds at twe and one-half and three and one-half miles south of Columbia Cltr. Road 28— One-way traffic one mile west of Road 9. Run-around at three and onehalf miles west of lunctlon with 9. Watch for grading gangs between Selma and Tarmland. nomd 39—Drive carefully cast grading gangs between Burlington and Mlddlefork. Detour lust north of Michigantown wl.l change as work progresses. Bridge runarounds at three and one-half, nine and e>s-n mites south of Logansoort. U S. Road 31— Bridge run-around two miles north of Carmel. Road 37— Unfinished shoulders between W-edmore and Bloomington, and between Sulphur and PaoU. necessitate careful drtvr U. S. Road 40— One-way traffic in places between Greenfield and Cumberland account pavement repair. U- 8. Road 82—Detour two and one-half miles east of Andersonvtlle is eight miles. Detour will be In effect until Aug. 21. Road 56—Detour one and one-half miles east of Oakland City to one mile south of Winslow la eighty miles. Detour from Canton to ten mites west of Scottsburg is eight miles. Detour from Junction with Road 31 east through Scottsburg is one mile. Temporary bridge two miles east of Madison. Detour from Aberdeen to Rising Bun t* eleven end one-half miles, fair condition Road 61—Detour one-half mile south of Arthur to one mile south of Winslow Is eight miles. Detour between Winslow and Petersburg is twelve mile* and narrow and crooked. Road 62—Detour from Dale to five miles east of Adevville Is thirty-five miles via Huntlngburg; many sharp turns and narrow bridges Local traffic use old Road 62 Run-around account enbankment slides three miles west of Sulphur for one-way traffic only. Road 66—Detour Just east of Hatfield is one mile. Road 67— Bridge run-around two miles portheast of Sandborn. Short detour In Red Key.
INCREASE IN TYPHOID NOT DUE TO DROUGHT Twenty-Three Cases Reported to State Board During July. Drought and attendant water shortage in southern Indiana apparently is not responsible for the slightly increased typhoid morbidity during July and thus far in August. Dr. V. K. Harvey of the state health board said today. The health officer supported his contention by pointing out that the cases have been scattered rather than isolated, or proportionally heavy, in the drought district. Health department records showed twenty-three cases reported during July. 1930. and nineteen during July. 1929. increase of four cases might have been due to the drought, he said. ARGUMENTS ARE SET IN GAS STATION SUIT Evidence Ended in Injunction Case Brought by Park Board. Arguments Monday before Howard Young, special circuit judge, will bring to a close the injunction suit of the city against the Lincoln Oil and Refining Company, in which abandonment of a filling station at Kessler boulevard and the Lafayette road is asked. Attorneys for the city contend the station is located in an area zoned for residential purposes, and that the park board is authorized to deny a permit. FILE CLAIMS AGAINST AIRPORT CONTRACTOR Three Finns Ask $1,500 in Suita in Circuit Court. Additional difficulties were recorded in process of building the new municipal airport with filing of three suits in Marion circuit court where claims totaling $1,500 are asked against Charles T. Caldwell, general contractor in charge of building the airport building and hangars. In one suit, the Niman Transfer Company asks judgment of $100; in a second complaint the Great Western Oil Company seeks claim against Caldwell for SBOO, and in the third Kerchner Brothers excavating firm asks $595. Co-defendants with Caldwell are the Cc imonwealth Casualty Company tnd the city. STREET LEVY ATTACKED Cancellation of Capitol Avenue Coats Asked in Suit. Cancellation of assessments levied against property as result of the widening and resurfacing of Capitol avenue, from Tenth to Sixteenth streets, is asked in a suit filed in superior court today by Paul C. Hill. Trial of the case will settle the question whether the city legally can force abutting property owners to pay more than one-fourth of the total improvement cost. FAIR ENTRIES INCREASE Exhlbtlon Will Eimd by 354 Any Previous Number. Exhibitors in the seventy-eighth annual Indiana state, fair will exceed bf 390 the number in any preview showing, E. J. Barker, sec-retary-treasurer of the fair association. announced today. Entry lists closed Wednesday. The fair will open Aug. 30 and close with an air circus and auto racing program cm Sept. 6. __
Here’s a Flock for You
If trying to keep Junior out of mischief makes your hair turn gray, just think of the problem faced by Mrs. Albert R. McCain, 25, above, of Pueblo, Colo., mother of two pairs of twins, bom within fifteen months of each other, in addition to two other children. The older twins. Geraldine Lou, left, and Virginia Lee, were born April 12, 1929, while the younger pair, Norman Charles, left, and Norma Rae, were bom July 6 of this year. The other two youngsters are Jack Albert, 5, and Richard Lowell, 3.
SIO,OOO IS GIVEN TO STATE BY WHITINGS Gift Is Made by Brothers to Conservation Department. Gift of SIO,OOO from Lawrence H. Whiting and Frank S. Whiting, of Whiting & Cos.. Chicago, to the Indiana department of conservation, was announced by Richard Lieber, director, today. The Whitings commended the conservation department's work, especially in the northern Indiana sand dunes region. Lieh:/ said the gift covered the
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1 difference in construction costs of the Dunes park road in between the brick and limestone, and that formal arrangements were made by Governor Harry G. Leslie and Fred E. Scbortemeier, former secretary of state, now attorney for the Indiana Limestone Company, headed by the WhitingsThe pavilion was erected at a cost of $104,000. The building industry is said to be the second largest industry in the country, with an annual vplume of business of approximately 78.000,000.000.
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U. S. DEMOCRACY IS THREATENED, AUTHOR SAYS Machine Age Looms as Peril, Well-Known Attorney Asserts. Bv United Prett CHARLOTTESVILLE V*„ Aug. 15.—Democracy in he United States is being threatened by machine age civilization, vith its concentration of economic power in the hands of a few mer., Donald *R. Richberg, prominent attorney and author, declared in a speech today before the institute of public affairs of the University of Virginia. This concentration of economic power, he said, either “will be
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matched by the development of na-tion-wide labor organizations wielding economic and political power of staggering proportions, or all-effec-tive, above-board labor organizations will be crushed and an underground, revolutionary labor movement will begin to rise to power.” Comparing the modern American capitalist with the feudal barons of old. Richberk declared “they still will build castles and cathedrals, and fill palaces with loot, and extend a corrupt patronage over art, but they also establish vast institutions that do much good, as well as considerable harm.” MEDAL AWARDED LINDY $1,500 Gold Emblem Pinned on Flier by President Hoover. rtu United Pretf WASHINGTON, Aug. 15. - A $1,500 gold medal, authorized jy congress and commemorative of tue aviation achievements of Charles A. Lindbergh was pinned upon the famous flier’s breast today by President Hoover at the White House.
CHILD REDS ARE GUARDED FROM MENACING MOB Communists’ Refusal to Accept U. S. Flag Stirs Klansmen. Bv United Pt ett __ ELMIRA, N. Y., Aug. 15.—The crowd that threatened to destroy the Communist children's camp near here was dispersed by state troopers today and quiet was restored after an exciting night. Three troopers are on guard at the camp at Van Etten, where seventy children are spending a vacation that is scheduled to end Saturday. Thursday night a mob of 1,500
men and boys, many of them carrying torches, gathered in front of the camp and threatened to burn it because two of the Communist leaders refused to accept an American flag, which patriotic organizations had offered.
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Arrival of Sheriff H. C. Tifft and state troopers prevented violence. After Mabel Husa and Ailene Holmes, leaders at the camp, refused the AniWldan flag, the Ku-Klux Klan, earlier in the week, tore the red flags from the entrance of the camp and burned a fiery cross there.
