Indianapolis Times, Volume 42, Number 148, Indianapolis, Marion County, 30 October 1930 — Page 16
PAGE 16
PRISON BUDGET PLEA INCREASED A HALF MILLION New Construction Is Listed in $1,643,092 Request Filed by Warden. Increase of more thfln a half million dollars over state prison appropriation for the past two years was asked in the biennial budget request filed with A. C. McDaniel, state budget clerk, today by Warden Walter H. Daly of the prison'. His total budget request was $1,643,09274. New construction would absorb $473,410.02 of the half million increase, while included is a special yeauest for $72,097.60, of which “half Js for current overexpenditure, and the remainder to carry on services, including adidtional guards that caused the deficit. Construction Divided The construction fund would be divided with $337,205.01 to be expended in 1931-32, and $136,205.91 in 1932-33. Included in the work it would accomplish would be completion of the present cellhouse, addition to the power plant, solitary and seclusion and deputies building, factory, new cellhouse. dining room addition and a criminal insane wing. . Talkie motion picture would cost £5,000. Silent pictures no longer are available, Warden Daly outlined. 200 Beds for Insane In the prison’s 900 cells, 2,300 prisoners are lodged, and there arc only 200 beds for 234 criminally incane patients, he said. George Wilson, superintendent of the Indiana school for the blind, north of Indianapolis, also submitted his biennial budget request for $212,033.50. While $184,154 is needed for structures and equipment, Wilson pared the request for that item to $65,700, of which $24,500 would be spent for equipment, $22,000 for structures, including a $15,000 home for the superintendent, and $19,500 expended for nonstructural work. WORK IS RESUMED AT NEW CITY AIRPORT Laborers to Be Paid by Casualty Company, Which Holds Bonds - . Work was resumed today on the building at 'the new municipal airport, south of Bep Davis, by laborers who will be paid wages by the Commonwealth Casualty Company, which holds the bond for the work on Charles T. Caldwell, general contractor. The city Wednesday issued a default order against Caldwell. Lasi week workmen quit when Caldwell was unable to meet wages. The building, which was to have been done July 15, is expected to be completed about Jan. 1. COLLEGE REMOVAL TO CITY NOT DECIDED Olivet Officials Still Considering Former Butler Site. Definite decision as to whether Olivet college, Nazarene theological seminary located twelve miles south of Danville, 111., will move to the old campus and buildings of Butler university, Indianapolis, has not been made, according to word received today. A committee has been appointed to inspect the Butler site and it is though trustees are considering Indianapolis as the best of several offers they have received. Removal from Olivet, however, will mean abandonmentof a million dollars’ worth of property and buildings. The college has 300 students. V'wATCh\ /REPAIRINbX I i At Very Low Prices 1 f I rolniT IQ CRYSTALS * ,f FANCY SHAPE AQ )■ CRYSTALS I FN BREAKABLE JQ c RVSTAES “ c ANY MAIN- QQI SPRING PUL ANY WATCH Cl AQ fl CLEANED vL''*' A A>Y $1 19 A JEWEL ...... .p 1. IJ Square Deal Jewelry
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Nan Sues
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Nan Britton, author of ‘‘The President’s Daughter,” is busy conferring with her lawyer in preparation for the trial of her suit for SIOO,OOO against vendors of the book known as ‘‘The Answer to the President's Daughter.” The suit will be tried in the United States district court at Toledo this winter.
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WORLD LOOKING TO HOOVER TO END DEPRESSION Expect Him to Call Session of Economists to Ponder Task. BY WILLIAM PHILIP SIMMS Serippt-Howard Forcirn Editor WASHINGTON, Oct. 30.—Leading business men abroad, according to late dispatches, are looking to President Hoover to call a world conference to put an end to the depression and unemployment. The whole world, it is pointed out, is in the same boat. Every nation is dependent upon every other nation. No nation long can enjoy good times while other nations are having hard times. Accordingly, say these foreign business men and industrialists, it won’t do any individual country much good to try to work out its own salvation, regardless of what may be happening in other countries. United action is essential if the world hopes to recover any time soon from the dumps in which it now finds itself. Leadership is expected, or at least hoped for from the United States,
THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
if possible from the President himself. But no one here can be found who believes for one moment the President will sponsor any such international gathering—at least not officially. And the reasons are made quite plain. First, the President, by signing the Smoot-Hawley bill, makes himself sponsor for the highest tariff ever passed by afty nation on earth. And the tariff, universally regarded by foreign nations as the biggest stumbling block in the road to trade revival, necessarily would figure largely in any world economic parley. Second, there are the reparations and war debts. The United States is chief beneficiary of both. The bulk of what Germany pays to France, England and the other allies in turn is paid over to the United States on war debts and this one-way flow of gold, and the taxa-
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tion and financial drain the payments constitute on the European population, are considered abroad as a second big cause of depression. It is hardly to be expected, therefore, that the President would cause to be convened any international congress to debate these things. For while war debts are not exactly a political issue in this country, the tariff is very much. Nevertheless, if a way could be found to bring together the best brains of the world to consider a way out of the economic slump, virtually universal, it is believed the President would be the first to encourage it—provided, of course, it would not be lised to pillory the United States.
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Farmer Severely Hurt pm Times Special COLUMBUS, Ind., Oct. 30.—Ferrell Hendershot, 33, farmer west of here, was seriously hurt when his automobile turned over on state road No. 46 near the Brown county
Special Football Train Saturday, November 1 $4.30 $4.20 CHAMPAIGN URBANA and Return and Return Half Fare for Children 5 and Under 12 Years Account Illinois-Purdue Football Game Pullman Cars—Coaches—Dining Car Special train will leave Indianapolis 9:30 a. m.; Returning, leave Champaign 7:00 p. m, Urbana 7:10 p. m. Tickets and reservations at City Ticket Office, 112 Monument Circle. Phone RHey 3322, and Union Station, phone Riley 3355. Football tickets also on sale at City Ticket Office; BIG FOUR ROUTE
line. He is in a hospital here suffering from cute and bruises. His face was cut from his forehead to his chin on either side of the nose, his teetli were broken out and his collar bone broken. Hendershot lost control of his automobile when it struck fresh gravel. It is said the
_OCT. 30, 1930
car turned over five times and landed bottom side up.
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