Indianapolis Times, Volume 45, Number 181, Indianapolis, Marion County, 8 December 1933 — Page 19

DEC. R, 1933

APPROVE PLANS >OR EMPLOYING 900 MORE MEN Civil Works Administration Passes On Three Projects. New civil works projects providing employment for more than nine hundred Marion county men were approved today by the civil works administration. The new projects are construction of a lakf and flood levies at the Riverside nursery employing 703 men; Fall Creek boulevard improvement, nineteen men. and Ellenberger Park boulevard construction, 218 men. These were part of a group of projects submitted to the administration by the city park board, which would provide employment for a of 3.000 men. The other projects will be anted on later. The largest project proposed, would provide 2.300 jobs in the extension of Kessler boulevard from Keystone avenue east to Millersville, a distance of two and one-half miles. A. C Sallee, park superintendent, estimated the work would cost $250.000. Under the plan, a dirt roadway would be constructed now, and this would be oiled and surfaced in the spring. Fifteen projects which will emplay 640 men in Marion county with total wages of $80,293, were approved by the civil works administration yesterday. Largest projects in the group are washing and cleaning buildings, 143 men, and additional White river levee work, 100 men. Grading projects approved include Baltimore and Sangster avenues, from Fortyrsecond to Forty-sixth street, seventy-six men

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PRACTICE MELODRAMA

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Oh. my! Look at that, and repeal only a few days old. Just what the drys said would happen. Here’s Miss Philhppa Schreiber, tugging tearfully at the arm of the bottle-tipping Dale Smith, and repeating that famous plea: ‘’Father, dear father, come home with me now.” But it was all in fun. They

each; Tacoma avenue, Temple avenue and Rural street, each from Thirty-fourth to Thirty-eighth street, total of seventy-seven men. Among other projects approved were playground repairs, ten men; East Ohio street drain from Pogues Run to Highland avenue, thirty men; cleaning national guard armory interior, five men; development of I. U. medical center cam-

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pus, thirty-seven men; Arlington avenue storm sewer from Pleasant Run to Lowell avenue, forty-two men; Sixteenth street drainage system at Mount street and Warman and Tibbs avenue, thirty-six men. Four of nine boycotts declared against Japan by China in the last twenty-five years have been followed by an increase in its Japanese imports.

THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

T. 8. PERILING 700 CHILDREN, BOARDREPORTS Many Are Exposed to Dread Disease Daily, Health Officials Say. More than seven hundred children, many of them in their early school years, daily are exposed in their homes to the dangers of tuberculosis, in the city, it was learned by The Times today. According to officials of the city health board, and city hospital and members of the Indianapolis Flower mission, there now are more than four hundred advanced cases of tuberculosis throughout the city which constantly subject the children to the disease. These cases have been termed “incurable” by medical authorities and there is no place in the city to take them for care and treatment. In investigating the case of Mrs. Ethel Sumner, 36, of 1641 North Capitol avenue, it was learned Mrs. Sumney has been bedfast from the advanced stages of tuberculosis for more than a year. The P. T. A. of School 32 has been aiding Mrs. Sumner, her 13-year-old daughter and 15-year-old son. The father is dead. Shortly after Mrs. Sumner became ill, members of the P. T. A., through the city health board, made arrangements to take her to Sunnyside sanatorium. However, Mrs. Sumner refused to go. Her daughter has been administering to Mrs. Sumner. Several efforts were made to obtain aid for Mrs. Sumner Wednes-

day night, but she did not receive attention until 10 a. m. yesterday. The Times obtained action through Dr. Herman G. Morgan, secretary of the health board, and Mrs. Sumner was placed in a private home for care today. The P. T. A, is making arrangements for the care of the children. When advised of the situation. Mayor Reginald H. Sullivan and other city officials announced they would exert every effort to advance the request of the Indianapolis Flower Mission society, for a federal loan of $90,300 to erect a building at the city hospital to care for such cases. SAN BORN TO BE GIVE N MERIT AWARD TONIGHT Dinner to Be Held in Honor of City Electrician. Presentation of the James H. McGraw national award of merit to Gerry’ M. Sanborn, president of the Sanborn Electric Company, will be made at a dinner in his honor tonight at the Architects and Builders building. Earl Whitehorne, New York, assistant vice-president of the Mc-Graw-Hill Publishing Company, will be the principal speaker and will present Mr. Sanborn with • the award, which is made in recognition of “constructive thinking for the advancement of the electrical industry.”

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ATTACK TRIAL DELAYED AGAIN Young Woman Who Leaped From Window Too 111 to Appear. Mrs. Mary Beyerlein, 26, South Addison street, who jumped several floors from a North Illinois street apartment house to the street, last Sept. 27. in order to frustrate an alleged attack, still is too ill to appear in court. • Detectives testified to the girl's condition in municipal court today when William Bowers, 517 North Illinois street, and Richard Heyman, 609 East Twenty-fourth street, were arraigned in municipal court before Judge Dewey Meyers on charges of assault and battery with intent to kill and possession of an alleged narcotic known as marajuana. Judge Meyers continued the case until Dec. 20. Political Speech Postponed A speaking engagement to address the members of the Phillips Memorial church on Dec. 10 has been postponed until some future date due to a change of pastors, Earl Teckelmeyer, independent candidate for mayor, announced today.

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