Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 26 August 1937 — Page 4
PAGE 1
City Restrained From Start- |
ing Work on $145,000 Warfleigh Project.
Mayor Kern today said he would | discuss allegations that the War- | not |
fleich sewer contract was | awarded .to the lowest bidder with |
Works Board members tomorrow. |
The City was restrained from | starting work on the $145,000 proj- | ect a week ago by Judge Earl R. Cox | after an injunction suit was filed | by Joseph Daniels, Indianapolis | businessman. | a motion. to dissolve the rei order, City attorneys that the restraining order | iled after the legal period for | i so had expired. | After hearing testimony from | Works Board members and City | Engineer Henry B. Steeg that the | lowest bidder was more competent and better able financially to undertake the -work than the idder, Judge Cox overruled |
econd
| |
1OWeSt
th motinn ne motion
Readvertising Possible Hearing on temporary injunction was set for Sept. 14. It was indicated the Board might set | aside all bids and readvertise. Bonds for the project were to] have gone on sale Monday, but legal | action pending prevented. | The Jefferson Construction Co. of | Indianapolis was the low bidder, | approximately $17,000 under A.| Acari, Lafayette, who was awarded |
the contract.
COUNTY PREPARES TO SCAN BUDGETS
that that
Formal Session Scheduled For Sept. 7. |
Marion County Councilmen are]
TARKINGTON GIVEN
Kiwanis Host
Ralph O. Virts
State Kiwanians and ‘their wives will be guests of the Ft, Wayne Kiwanis Club at the Indiana district convention Sept. 19 to 21. Invitation to the convention was issued today by Ralph O. Virts, Ft. Wayne club president, who is
being assisted with arrangements by Homer P. Thomas, general convention committee chairman, Seventy-three Indiana clubs are to send delegates.
‘the contracts to
FRATERNITY AWARD
Sigma Chi Elects Dr. McLean to Editorial Post.
| |
By United Press
BOSTON, Aug. 26.—Two newspaper publishers and a novelist were | among the seven men honored by | Sigma Chi Fraternity at the closing | session of its 43d biennial national | convention last night. Recipients of the awards for | “achievements which have brought | honor and prestige to Sigma Chi Fraternity” were: James G. Stahlman, Nashville, Tenn. publisher and president of the American Newspaper Publishers’ Association. M. H. Aylesworth, Seripps-Howard | Newspapers’ executive and former head of the National Broadcasting |
to start study next Tuesday of the | Co
County offices and departments | budget requests for 1938, Fabian W. | Biemer, deputy auditor, said today. The board's formal session is to | be Sept. 7 when it must adopt budgets and fix the tax rate. Budget review and local unit tax | rate are to be considered Sept. 13 | by the Marion County Tax Adjust- | ment Board. Budgets then are sub- | ject to review by the State Tax | Board.
ADKINS AND TERRELL | BUY ANOTHER CIRCUS
> inited Press ROCHESTER, Aug. 26.—Jess Ad- | Kins and Zack Terrell, owners of the Cole Brothers- Beatty cus which has its winter quarters have purchased another cirand will send it on the road next .year in its own train, they announced today.
the
lvde
The name of company bought was not divulged, Mr. Adkins, it was learned here. | is making arrangements for additions to the circus quarter here to house the new equipment and personnel.
they |
SUIT HITS PURCHASE | OF DEMOCRAT BOOKS
By United Press CHICAGO, Aug. 26.—A suit by Robert 'C. Kewley, attorney, stockholder in Swift & Co.. sought re- | covery from directors of the meat | packing company today $3000 spent for Democratic year books autographed by President Roosevelt. Mr. Kewley the suit perior Cour charging directors | squandered and wasted the money | “particularly by paying out large | sums of the funds of the corpora- |
tion to the Democratic Party.” |
filed in Su-
41:00
VICTIM DIES AFTER | ASSAULT ON STREET
Police today renewed their search for the assailant of Sam Harvey, 55, | a vegetable peddler’s assistant. address unknown, who died last night in City Hospital from a fractured skull, Mr. Harvey was beaten to the pavement last ‘Sunday in the 400 block E. South St. Witnesses told police the assailant, accompanied by & young woman and a baby, fled in an automobile, { | CARDINAL BISLETI ILL By United Press i VATICAN CITY, Aug. 26—The Vatican announced today that Gaetano Cardinal Bisleti, 81, head of the congregation of seminaries and universities, was suffering from bronchial pneumonia at Grotto Ferrata, near Castel Gandolfo.
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Come
Booth Tarkington, novelist. U. S. Senator Burke of Nebraska. John C. Hostetter, ‘director of development and research ‘at the Corning, N. Y., Glass Works. Milton O. Caniff, cartoonist. Former Secretary of War Patrick | J. Hurley. L. G. Balfour, Attleboro jewelry | manufacturer, was elected national | head ‘of the fraternity succeeding |
| Ralph Porter, Chicago attorney. |
Other officers elected were: Grand | Annotator Irwin P. Reiger, Chicago; grand tribune, Dr. W. Henry Mec- | Clean, Indianapolis; grand editor | and historian, Chester W. Cleve- | land, Chicago, and treasurer, J.!
| Russell Easton, Chicago.
Trustees chosen were I. A. Downs,
| Illinbis Central Railroad president; | Richard S. Doyle, Washington, for-
mer Governor Chase. S, Osborne of | Michigan; Fred Armstrong Jr. St. Louis, and T. B. Freeman. Chicago.
‘GRAY AWAITS REA
POSITION ON BIDS.
Times Special WASHINGTON, Aug. 26.—Rep. | Finly H. Gray is staying here until the Rural Electrification Admini- |
| stration decides whether contracts
to supply co-operatives in Indiana's | 10th District should go to munici- | pal plants or large private companies, he announced today. Bids of both are now being examined and compared at REA head- | quarters, he said. Should the mu- | nicipal plant bids equal those of the | private concerns they must be | awarded the contracts under the REA law, according to Mr. Gray.
56 DIE IN POLISH STRIKE
By United Press WARSAW, Poland, Aug. 26—As | many as 56 persons were killed and | Scores were injured in . rioting | brought about by a national farm- | ers strike, provincial reports an- | nounced today. ,
ELECTRIC
TWIN TUBS INCLUDED
STIVER ENTERS LIST OF BIDDERS ON SAFETY BOOK
Collaborates With Krem| and Rice in Writing Textbook.
The latest of a dozen bidders for supply safety course textbooks to the State Board of Education is Don F. Stiver, State Safety Director.
The contracts. for approximately.
60,000 ‘copies ‘of a book to be used in eighth. grades throughout the state are to be awarded Tuesday. The new course is required under a law passed by the 1937 Legislature, Awards are to be made on a twoyear basis, and a $50,000 bond is required from each bidder. Mr.. Stiver's book was written in
demonstration.
collaboration with Lieut. Frank Kreml, Evanston, Ill, safety expert, and Dr. Thurman B. Rice of the State Health Department. Most nationally known publishing houses are bidding for the contract, according to the Department of Education. The new law provides that safety courses be taught at least one semester starting in January, Since the courses are comparatively new, few textbooks have been published, but since they were ordered in Indiana, there has been a rush to! complete the standard texts. Another book has been written by William A. Evans, Indianapolis School Safety Director. It is published by the Lyons & Carnahan Co.
LOCAL MAN ABOARD VESSEL IN WAR AREA
An Indianapolis man, Ensign William G. Ward, Shortridge * High School and Naval Academy graduate, today was in the fighting zone of the Sino-Japanese war, according | to his parents, Mr. and Mrs. C. Dana Ward, 4636 Cornelius Ave.
Ensign Ward is aboard the U.'S.
destroyer Parrott, stationed near the mouth of the Whangpoo River,
- THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
INSTITUTE IS HELD BY SALVATION ARMY
Frederick E. Schortemeier, Salvation Army board of directors president, today was to address young people from 37 Indiana Salvation Army posts at the first Indiana Youth Institute at the Sale vation Army Fresh Air Camp, Oaklandon. Grover Van Duyn, Assistant State Superintendent of Public Instruction, also was to speak. The camp is under the direction of Major P. L. DeBevoise, state Salvation Army commander.
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