Indianapolis Times, Volume 45, Number 245, Indianapolis, Marion County, 21 February 1934 — Page 22
PAGE 22
NORRIS HOMES HAVE LUXURIES FEW POSSESS White House Conveniences Are Excelled in New Type Dwellings. Thi* it the third in > teriet of' ditpatrhet eoneemlnr President RooHtdt i Trnonr Valley Authority, tellln* of the hornet with ultra-modern conveniences which may be rented for S2O monthly at Norris, Tenn. 4 BY FREDERICK C- OTHMAN United Press Staff Correspondent (Copyright, 1934, by United Press) NORRIS, Tenn., Feb. 21.—A typical home in this model city contains luxuries that even the White House doesn't have. For S2O a month, a worker on President Roosevelt’s Tennessee river development program gets a home as architecturally perfect as America's best building brains can design. He gets electric heating, electric hot water heating, electric refrigeration, electric cooking, electric lighting, tiled bath, a four-acre farm and mountain vistas such as the wealthy spend fortunes to see. He gets a park in front of his house and a garden in the rear, a parking place in a community garage for his car, and a living room paneled in pine, like the pent-house libraries of the rich. Kitchens Gleam With Metal He even gets a copper gutter arrangement to keep the termites from boring into his floors, porches screened with copper netting to keep out mosquitos and casement windows so that he may take full advantage of the mountain breezes. The kitchen gleams with chromium such as the highland housewife never has seen before. There is a fireplace to make her feel at home and a great porch which she may use as a dining room in the summer. The outside timbers are rough hewn and the shingles hand split, while the walls are stained a soft brown so that the house will blend into the maple forest around it. Any one who has a job in Norris, headquarters for Norris dam and destined to be a mountain industry center, can rent a house from the TVA. Rents range from S2O a month for a three-room house to $45 a month for seven rooms. The Electric Home and Farm Authority, a subsidiary of the TVA, will install the electric furnace, refrigerator and stove, allowing the householder to pay for them on his electric bill over four years. Power Sendee Cheap It is estimated shat the monthly bill for electricity and payments upon all the devices in the house will average about SB. After the equipment is paid for, the bill will be almost negligible, so low will be electric current rates. The Electric Home and Farm Authority, meantime, is experimenting with refrigerators and stoves, intended to simplify their design, strip them of fancy nonessentials and sell them to dwellers in the valley at far below the present cost of similar articles. The farms which are included with each house are on the edge of town. They will be planted scicntiflcially, and fertilized with limestone from the ground, nitrates from legumes, and potash from Muscle Shoals. (Tomorrow—What the highlanders think of this new deal and why some of them are planning to go to Brazil, where they hope to be safe from dams.)
LUTZ GIVES RULING ON FEEDING OF PRISONERS Provisions for Sheriff Fees No Longer Exists, He Declaies. Bad news for sheriffs was contained today in the opinion given by Attorney-General Philip Lutz to William Cosgrove, chief examiner of the state board of accounts. Mr. Lutz held there no longer are provisions under the 1935 acts for sheriff fees in the feeding of prisoners. and that bills must be submitted and paid by the state. Formerly many sheriffs received a 40 cents per diem a prisoner, fed them for much less and profited by the remainder.
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HOOSIER ACCUSED OF MURDER IN MICHIGAN Involves Another In Slaying of Slot Machine Owner, Police Say. B;i Ignited Prms BALDWIN, Mich.. Feb. 21.—Martin (Mike) Ross, 30, Lagrange, Ind., farmer was to be arraigned here today on charges of siaying Donald Chesbro, 33, Indiana slot machine owner. Ross confessed planning Chesbro’s slaying to rob him, and named
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Charles (Cooney) Hatfield as the actual slayer, police said. Although Chesbro’s body was found in the ditch along a backwoods road near here, Lake county officers said they believed Ross might be prosecuted in St. Joseph county, where the slaying reportedly occurred during a ride a week ago from Lagrange. Girl Scout Group Plans Benefit A benefit bridge party will be given by the Mothers’ committee of Girl Scout Troop 40 in the Banner - Whitehill auditorium this afternoon at 2.
THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
COUNTY PIONEER DEAD; RITES TO BE HELDFRIDAY John Fellenger, 88, Passes at Home of Daughter Here. Funeral sendees for John Fellenzer, 88, will be held in the Eighth Christian church at 2 Friday afternoon. Mr. Fellenzer died yesterday at the home of a daughter, Mrs. Charles H. Royster, 2522 West Washington street, with whom he made his home. He was a member of a pioneer Marion county family, and had lived almost his entire life on a farm near Speedway City. Suniving him are a twin brother, Francis Fellenzer, Clermont; the widow, Mrs. Elizabeth Fellenzer; the daughter, Mrs. Royster, and a son, Clarence Fellenzer, Detroit. Rites for Pastor’s Mother Funeral services for Mrs. O. F. Harry, 71, mother of the Rev. S. B. Harry, pastor of the Meridian Heights Presbyterian church, will be held at the church tonight, with the Rev. W. S. Whitsett of Marion in charge. Burial will be in Lincoln, 111. Mrs. Harry had been ill a number of years. She suffered a stroke of apoplexy Thursday fro mwhich she did not regain consciousness. She had lived almost all of her lifetime in Lincoln, and came to Indianapolis a year ago to make her home with her son.Surviving her are the son and a brother, Paul S. Fuson, Mishawaka. World War Veteran Passes The body of Clifford Bowman, 40, World war veteran, who died of pneumonia in Chicago, Sunday, will be brought to Indianapolis for funeral services at 2 tomorrow in the C. M. C. Willis and Son mortuary. Burial will be in Crown Hill, Mr. Bowman was born in Indian-
WILL YOU BE READY? WILL KNOCK BUT ONCE ON EVERY DOOR IN INDIANAPOLIS SATURDAY, FEB. 24 SEE TOMORROW'S TIMES
| apolis, and enlisted in the army in 1913. serving until 1920. He had \ lived in Chicago the last three I years. Surviving him are his mother. Mrs. Anna C. Bowman; a sister. Miss Hortense Bowman, and a halfbrother. Ben Young all of Indianapolis. Danville Farmer Succumbs Funeral services for Henry I. Beckley,' 78, retired Hendricks county farmer, will be held at 2 tomorrow in the Danville Baptist church Burial will be in Danville. The body will be at Shirley Brothers central chapel, 946 North Illinois street, until noon tomorrow. Mr. Beckley died yesterday in the home of a daughter, Mrs. Charlotte Beckley Lehman, 420 East North street, with whom he had made his home for the last few months. He had been ill six weeks. Negroes Steal Taxicab Three Negroes robbed Robert Brown. 35, a taxi driver, 543 Holly street, in Rhodius park early today, stealing the cab valued at S3OO. The Negroes, according to Brown, boarded his cab in Blake street and directed him to drive to the park.
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.FEB. 21, 1934
