Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 14 December 1938 — Page 13

"Old Weather Tower Dismantled

Times Photo.

With the ‘Weather Bureau moved into new quarters in the Federal

Building, the old weather tower

on the roof of the Consolidated

Building no longer is in use. Workmen are dismantling the 40-foot structure. The new tower on the Federal Building is only 26 feet high.

COUNTY PROJECTS GET WPA APPROVAL

28 Other State Programs in $3,011,567 Grant.

Approval of. four WPA projects in Marion County totaling $228,963 was announced today by John K. Jennings, State WPA administration. The Marion County projects are among 32 Indiana projects which total $3,011,567. Of the Marion County allotments, $33,982 is earmarked for improvements at City Hospital, $63,200 to . repair and catalog hoks for township school libraries, $67,911 to improve streets in Beech Grove and $63,870 to install an inventory system of personal property in Marion County. Other allotments included are: Madison County, $120,519 to improve Adams Township grade and high school buildings in Markleville and $4337 to improve the National Guard Armory in Elwood.

Tipton County, $6029 to preserve books for township public school libraries. Lawrence County, $7200, cleaning and renovating Gourt House at Bedford; Wells County, $48,262, streets and alleys in Bluffton; Miami Coun- © ty, $112,047, streets in Peru; Dearborn County, $44,370, streets and alleys: in Lawrenceburg; Jackson County, $176,544, streets and alleys in Seymour; Kosciusko County, $28,164, streets and alleys. a Randolph County, $49,377, streets

. and alleys in Union City; Jefferson

County, $4623, to improve Saluda ‘Township school building; Allen County, $45,920, addition to Springfield Township school; Daviess County, $766, to improve County Farm building and grounds near Washington. Elkhart County, $1794, to consttuet municipal police station in Goshen and $7740 to prepare new

section atlas containing information

on Goshen streets. + Vermillion County, $25,031, to improve county-owned park in Blanford. ' Floyd County, $57,978, storm sewers in New Albany. Sullivan County, $3857, to improve

~ Mary. Sherman Memorial Hospital

and $86,001 for streets in Carlisle. Fountain County, $4956, central depository for county records in Covington. Rush County, $13,138, to maintain and operate sewing rooms in Rushville. Grant County, $132,700, to improve State Road 26 and State Road 221.

County road improvement allot-

ments are: Hendricks County, $117, _

Rh : Kheumatism

428; Wells County, $210,570; Mont-. gomery County, $273,383, and Henry County, $258,671. :

WITNESSES CALLED IN LOGANSPORT SUIT

LOGANSPORT, Dec. 14—Witnesses were subpenaed yesterday in the $40,000 damage suit of Albert Pogue, Monticello factory employee, against Allen Bailey, Delphi busiessman. They will appear in Cass jgcuit Court Thursday. The suit came to the local court from Carroll Court. “Mr. Pogue asks $40,000 damages for personal injuries suffered a few years ago in an auto crash near banon. The crash proved fatal to C. A. Bailey, then principal of the Rockfield High School and father of the defendant.

Not as Spry, But Still Fine At 101 Years

Norval Wilson Bell, 2165 S. High School Road, started his 102d year today, very much interested in life. Although he isn't as spry as he used to be, he said he felt fine and was looking forward to a “lot more birthdays.” He celebrated his 101st anniversary quietly yesterday at his home. All the festivities were taken care of Sunday when his family brought him presents and toasted, his health. He spends most of his time quietly at home reading magazines, watching the airplanes at Municipal Airport, near his home, and reminiscing on the past. A daughter-in-law, Mrs. Charles Bell, recalled that his comment on an air carnival at Munijcipal Airport last summer was that “it is almost

as exciting as market time when I was a boy and we used to see 30 or 40 of the finest carriages in the county assembled in town.” “He is always realling things" like that,” she said, “but he is very much interested in the present. He doesn’t want to ride in an airplane; but he says he sees their need in the modern world.” Born in Cumberland, Md, Mr. Bell has spent most of his life in Ohio and Illinois. He came to Indianapolis six years ago. He has two sons, Charles and Harry: Bell, both of Indianapolis; four grandchildren, and two great-grandchildren.

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‘AS BENEFACTOR

Manufacturer Is Chosen as Honorary Member of Community Fund. : May

Arthur R. Baxter, Indianapolis manufacturer and widely known here for his . charities and civic leadership, will be the Indianapolis Community Fund’s honorary member for 1939 in recognition of his “outstanding and unselfish service to the public welfare.” An henorary membership certificate was presented to Mr. Baxter last night by Almus G. Ruddell, a former honorary member, at the fund group’s 19th annual meeting at the Claypool Hotel. Mr. Baxter praised the work of the Indianapolis Community Fund in his acceptance speech.

“There is a continuous need for character building agencies in the community such as those the Community Fund helps support,” he said. “It is my hope that the Community Fund will l} Aiveys be able

| Paid High Honor

Arthur R. Baxter |

to help them continue their good work.”

Raymond P. Clapp, manager of this year’s drive, said that although the Fund goal fell short this year, all agencies ordinarily aided by the Fund would be supported in such a

Seven new directors of the Com-

manner that they ‘would functio properly.

munity Fund were named at the meeting. They are Robert Efroymson, Harold B. Tharp, George H. Bischoff, N. T. Pritchard, A. W. Metzger, William ©. Griffith and Mrs. Benjamin D. Hitz. : Directors re-elected were: Alex Corbett Jr., Miss Gerifude ¢ Tap art, Charles Ww. Chase, A. + ig James F. Carroll, William H. Insley and Alex E. Gordon. : The Most Rev. Karl J. Alter,

the Catholic Church, the principal speaker, stressed the relation between social service and charity, “Charity is the cement in the structure of our civilization,” he|® said. “Unless social service is fortified, impregnated with charity, it will remain sterile. Social service is a scientific inquiry into and advancement of the temporal surroundings of the individual. Charity is with the spirit, and social service is with the mind, and there can be no opposition between the two.”

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4