Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 8 October 1936 — Page 10
FOR RECORDS
suction of of Detention Home Would Provide Courthouse Space.
~ Fear that county records might be destroyed by fire was a motivating factor behind the demand for a new Juvenile Detention Home, County Commissioner Clarence I. Wheatley
said today.
These records, some of which date back to 1822, now are kept in seven
. rooms on the Courthouse fourth
floor. A work shop on the same floor has been cited frequently as an added fire hazard. Two months ago there was a blaze in the Courthouse tower near the
records.
If a site finally is selected and if Pederal funds are used to build the
x . new home, Mr. Wheatley said the
i
2
¢
~ Juvenile Court would be moved from the Courthouse. Five rooms for records would be provided in the Courthouse basement, and the com-
" missioners have discussed the possi-
bility of making these fireproof. Dispute Over Site County officials have been notified
- that a Federal loan and grant of
$133,181 has been approved in Washington by PWA. Commissioners are considering erecting. the new detention building on E. Ohio-st near East-st. Disputes over selection of a site have held up appropriations for a home on previous occasions, and commissioners have said the matter is still “far from settled.”
While pointing out that he knew nothing of the particular project now being considered, Juvenile Court Judge John F. Geckler declared he needs new quarters. Mrs. E. I. Yeager, record clerk, did not favor giving up seven rooms to move the records into five. She claimed it would be almost impossible to move the records witheut “getting them hopelessly mixed.”
Questions Space
“Our rooms here have 20-foot ceilings, and they are filled,” she said, “The basement rooms are not nearly as large. We are not fraid of fire up here, although we think the workshop should be moved to the basement. This would give us much needed expansion space.” For the past few months seven PWA workers have been assigned to Mrs. Yeager to clean and sort the old papers. She has been notified that the men may be taken off the project. “If this is done the county will have to hire people to take their places,” she said. The present Juvenile Detention Home is at 425 E. Michigan-st. It has been declared unsuitable because of its size. It originally was
_ a dwelling.
O’MAHONEY ATTACKS “STATE'S SPENDING
Practice of the same economies by the state as were used by local subdivisions would have made unnecessary the gross income tax, J. ¥. O'Mahoney, speaking for the Associated ! Retailers of Indiana,
said in an address before Kiwanis Club members at the Columbia Club yesterday. Attacking the levy, he declared that it “represents an additional
"hidden tax load of $25 annually for
the average family of five” He “should management and civil service for the political spoils tem” to make unnecessary any substitute tax for school aid. aid.
PERKINS DEFENSE
HITS IDENTIFICATION
By United Press SOUTH BEND, Ind, Oct. 8— Testimony to refute identifications by state witneses of Jack Perkins as a member of a gang which robbed ‘the Merchants National Bank and killed Patrolman Howard Wagner was offered by the defense in St. Joseph Circuit Court today. Perkins is charged with first demurder in connection with the ‘alleged to have been led by hn Dillinger and George (Baby ) Nelson, slain gang leaders. Six witnesses, one of whom is a employe, testified Perkins was among the gang members.
ARRANGE CARD PARTY
Euchre and bunco are to be played the Veterans of Foreign Wars pd party at 8 o'clock tomorrow at in the Sergt. Barker Hall, 436
TROUBLES
ntatives of Wm. S. Rice, Adams, , originator of the Rice Method for ‘self treatment of rupture at home, at the Lincoln Hotel, Indianapolis, ‘Monday and Tuesday, Oct. 12 and 13, a personal and free trial of his to all sufferers who want to end ire trouble and truss wearing.
Paul C. Moore has been elected president of the Indianapolis Actuarial Club. Other new officers are E. J. Buddenbaum, vice president, and R. A. Clark, secretarytreasurer.
STATE TO OPEN BIDS FOR 180 SNOW PLOWS
snow plows will be received Friday by the State Highway Commission, it was announced today by James D. Adams, chairman. Although part of the plows are to replace equipment worn out by hard use last winter, most of them will be distributed among state highway sub-districts which have not had such equipment in the past, and which were placed under a serious handicap during the continued snow and sleet storms last winter, Mr. Adams said. A quarter of a million dollars was spent for removing snow and ice from the state highway sys-
‘tem last year, he added.
All the new plows will b® of the type attached to regular highway maintenance trucks. All but 15 of them will be of the single- blade tvpe.
POST TO SPONSOR PARTY
Service Post, 128, American Legion, is to sponsor a benefit card party at the Legion hall in Oaklandon Friday night.
Bids for the purchase of 180 |
OPENS MONDAY
De Pauw Educator fo Talk|
at Social Agencies’ Kirst Session.
The fn. in a series of social work lectures under auspices of the volunteers’ committee, Indianapolis Council of Social Agencies, is to be
‘i given at 10 a. m. Monday in Kirsh-
baum Center, it was announced today. Prof. Lester A. Jones, De Pauw University sociology department head, is to be the first lecturer,
, according to Mrs. Austin V. Clif-
ford, committee chairman. Other lectures scheduled are: Oct. 15, Dr. Verne K. Harvey, Indiana Division of Public Health director, and Miss Beatrice N. Short, Public Health Nursing Association superintendent; Oct. 19, Miss Evelyn Chambers; Oct. 22, Miss Ruth Martin, Indiana State Employment Service. Oct. 26, Miss Elizabeth M. Clarke, Children’s Bureau. director, Indian-
| 2apolis Orphan's Home; Oct. 29, Mrs.
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