Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 26 July 1939 — Page 10
HALLECK RAPS | SPENDING, CITES
Security Benefit Picnic Set—The Security Benefit Association, Mari-
| : i ATION AL DEBT on Council 738, will hold its annual ; h wi ¥. |picnic Sunday at Riverside Park. A
Indiana’s Share More Than Entire Value of Farm Lands, He Says. Times Special i - WASHINGTON, July
am, Rep. Charles A. Halleck
(R. Ind) said today that Indiana's
26.—Striking out at the New Deal's spending
feature will be a softball game at 2:30 p. m. The committee in charge includes F. L. Cross, Emerson Emery and Merritt Wright.
Stalcup Reunion to Be Aug. 13— The annual reunion of the Stalcup families of the United States is to be held at the Old Thatcher Stalcup homestead, three miles east of Linton, Ind., Aug. 13, it was announced today. L. D. Stalcup, of Tampa, Fla, who has completed a
share of the national\debt is $1,066,- | genealoogy of the Stalcup family
608,118. Hs In a study released today through
dating from. 1691, will be a principai speaker at the reunion. The
the Republican National Committee, |, nion is open to all persons whose the dean of Indiana’s Republican|,. ne is Stalcup, Stallcup, Staikop,
congressmen declared: : “To judge the.real impact of this burden of the New Deal's invisible
mortgage we must realize that the|Friede
total value of ali’ farm ‘land and farm buildings-in: Indiana, as jofficially reported by the Census Bureau _for 1935, was only $1,040,238,0€0.” ; Compares Figures " “This means that if we sold all
our farm land and farm buildings| tests will follow.
in Indiana, to pay off our per capita share of the national debt, we still would have to dig down into our pockets for an additional $25,460,--118,” he said. Dividing the share of the national debt by counties, Rep. Halleck found that Marion County's share is/$139,217,721. “These figures impress upon every citizen the terrific burden which the New Deal has piled up, not only for ourselves, but for our children and our children’s children for & century to come,” he said.
Points to Resulis
Stahlkop, etc. ;
Church to Hold 2-Day Fete—The Evangelical and Reformed Church, Parkway Ave. and S. Alapama St., will hold its second annual fun festival on the church grounds tomorrow and Friday. Supper will be served at 5 p. m. each day and entertainment and conAlvin Brehob is general chairman. The Rev. Robert C. Kuebler is pastor.
City's Air Future Is Stbject— Horace F Hill, passenger agent of Eastern, Airlines, will discuss Indianapolis as an aviation center at tomorrow’s luncheon of the Indianapolis Real Estate Board at the
Hotel Washington.
War Corps to Have Reunion— Members of the Medical Corps, 152d Infantry, who served in the World War, will hold a reunion and pitchin dinner at Mount Lawn Park, New Castle, Sunday, Aug. 6. Fre¢ L. An-
“For a time, some of the peoble|derson, secretary, said membership
consented to these large expendi-
tures, because they were told recov-
ery would follow: But now see the results—more than 10 million” un-
employed throughout the country;
includes veterans from throughout central Indiana.
Library Car Exhausted—After being driven 150,000 miles in picking
_ wheat at 58 cents a bushel; corn|up overdue books, getting gift books selling for 39 cents; oats at 20 and making deliveries, the old mescents: cream 20 cents, and eggs 12/senger car used by the Public Li-
cents, on the farm.
prary is worn out, L. L. Dickerson,
«It is time for every citizen of|librarian, has informed the School Indiana to ask himself how much Board.
longer he wants to allow his Gov-
Mr. Dickerson said the car was
ernment at Washington to pile up bought in 19832 and the cost of re-
this crushing invisible mortgage on pairs
would be “prohibitive.” He
everything he owns or may ever|was given permission to ask for bids
on another messenger car.
' CIRCLING
Good dirt and plenty of water are
Happy Days End—Boy Hurt—Until yesterday, 6-year-old Melvin Cornell, Lewisburg, Ky., was having a fine time visiting at the home of Mrs. Edward Pike, 614 E. 25th St. Then he stepped into the path of a bicycle and suffered a broken left leg. He is at City Hospital. Richard Gilmore, 2, of 3332 Cen|tral Ave., was taken to City Hospital
THE CITY
& RE 2k bo a =
#8 8.
$250,100 BOND
ISSUE APPROVED BY SCHOOL BODY,
Sum to Be Used for Howe
High School Addition and - 49th St. Building.
Bids will be sought soon for con-
struction of two school buildings, plans for which have.been approved
by ‘the Schopl Board, A. B. Good,
| Business Director, said today.
! The buildings are the new School
:|88 at Boulevard Place and 49th St.
‘land an - auditorium-gymnasium for ‘|Thomas Carr Howe High School.
‘The Board last night approved Mr.
Good's petition to issue $250,000
bonds to pay for: the Howe High School addition, buy more land for School 20 and Crispus Attucks High School and make repairs at Technical High School.
Cafeteria Is Planned
. The auditorium-gymnasium on the south end of Howe High School, in keeping with the Tudor . Gothic style, will place the clock tower almost in the center of the whole unit. A cafeteria will parallel the south side on the ground floor which also will house rooms for varsity and visiting athletic team, girls’ and boys’
" {locker rooms.
Times Photo.
This isn’t Jack’s beanstalk, but Mrs. O. C. Lowery’s 14-foot sunflower, grown in the back vard of her home at 219 Hancock Ave. garden also contains dahlias as large as saucers, and a willow tree, three and one-half years old, which is 45 feet high. Mrs. Lowery’s gardening experience is only as old as her willow tree. Their home was Withoul, grass or vegetation when they came to it, Mrs. Lowery said, but today”“they have a “jungle” in the back yard.
the secret, says Mrs. Lowery, who
now qualifies as an expert in oversized plant life.
Kiwanis to Get ‘Surprise’—Frank V. Hawkins and Howard E. Nyhart were to present a “surprise” program at the Kiwanis Club luncheon in the Columbis Club today.
Townsend Club to Meet—The Clifton Townsend Club 26 is to meet Thursday at the I. O. O. F. Hall, 1120 W. 30th St., Mrs. Clara Oxley,
The gymnasium and two apparatus rooms will be on the first floor. There will be room for folding bleachers on each sige of the standard basketball court and a stage at the east end of the floor. The entranée will be at the northwest corner, facing the proposed athletic field. The second floor will house two dressing rooms, storage room, room for the band and R. O. T. C. and ‘the physical education director’s office.
Limestone te Trim Brick
_ School 86 will be built of sandfaced reddish brown brick, trimmed with Indiana limestone and built in the early Americen adaptation of the Georgian style used in many New England schoois. A cupola will surmount the slate roof. According to architect's plans, the
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The Claypool the opening of the POMPEIAN LOGGIA
“A bit of the Old World in the midst of the New”
relaxation
secretary, announced today. building will face south with the main entrance from 49th St.: THe auditorium at the west end will seat 200 persons. Outside entrance to the auditorium will - be from Bouievard Place. Two rooms will be left unfinished in the basement, to be completed when. needed for domestic ‘science | {and manual training. There will be |a ‘large primary room, two class= rooms, a clinic, principal's office and toilets on the first floor. The audi- | torium and stage entrance will be at {the west end of the main corridor “on this floor. Carridors of Asphalt Tile
There will be six classrooms. on the second floor. Corridors will be of asphalt tile and trimmed with glazed tile wainscoting.
after he was burned by a disinfectant he spilled on his arm. His condition was fair.
DEPUTY GIVES BLOOD TO CITY PATIENT, 60
The Marion County deputy sheriffs’ emergency patrol along the hospital front was effective again today for the sixth time in two months. os Deputy Sheyift Albert Rosebroc at the corner of Washington ’ f furnished blood for William Barnes, and Illinois Streets. # 60, of- 2227 Northwestern Ave. : | seriously ill in City Hospital.
Service from the Famous Atrium Room and the 1) Sheriff al Fesey said that all
i his deputies have been typed and i Tavern are available for transfusions in Twenty-six: property owners livin 5 ; emergencies. : jon W. 43d .8t. and Berkley Road . : petitioned the "Board to’ furnish : / a : : : | transportation for 36 pupils attending schools at 40th St. and Capitol Ave, and 49th St. and Graceland Ave. “We have had our worries during the past few years in having neighbors take the children to school,” the ' petition said. “This has, in many instances, proven unreliable and expensive.” The request was referred to a committee composed of Superintendent DeWitt S. Morgan, Board Member Harvey B. ‘Hartsock and Mr. Good. Purchase of 25,770 tons of coal for $72,503.40 was divided among the Monument Coal Co., Logsdon Fuel and Supply Corp, MuesingMerrick Coal Co., Blue Diamond Coal Co., and Leonard Coal Co. .
Fence Bids Rejected
The Board rejected all bids for chain link fence for Broad Ripple High School's athletic field when an official of the Enterprise Iron and Fence Co., lowest bidder, said labor cost estimated at $1500 was not included in his bid. It was decided to readvertise. The Keystone Electric Co. Inc., with a bid of $1722, was awarded contract for stage border lights at Broad Ripple High School. The Board approved Superintend-| ent Morgan’s recommendations for six teacher appointments. They are Darrell H. Gooch and Byron Willis, Thomas Carr Howe High School; Mary Alice Lord, Manual High School; Harry Feldman, School 2; Ros€mary Cruzan, School 8, and Chester McNerney, School 14. Ruth | Cronk was appointed social service visitor. : ;
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Albert J. Beveridge Jr. will head the arragements committee for the first annual State School Safety Patrol circus to be held here Sept. 22 under sponsorship of Indiana State School Patrol, Inec., C.-A. Sanders, director, announced today. The event will be held in the Coliseum at the State Fair Grounds if it is available, or in the Manufacturers Building. A full evening show with more than 40 acts provided by units from all over the state is planned.
ROOSEVELT DELAYS HATCH BILL ACTION
WASHINGTON, July 26 (U. P.). —President Roosevelt delayed final executive action on the Hatch bill today pending receipt of departmental reports on it. It is designed to prohibit the vast majority of Federal employees from participating in politics. .The bill, which may become an important factor. in Presidential politics next year, reached the White House yesterday. It was sent to the Department of Justice and other Federal departments to which ‘it applies. ‘Mr. Roosevelt said he had not read it in the form in which Congress finally sent it to the White House. The bill would bar all but high policy-making executives of the]! Federal Government from partici-|! pating even in Presidential nominating conventions. Since traditionally, delegates to national conventions of parties in power have included a|!: heavy leavening of small Federal job| I holders, enactment of the bill may produce considerable revamping of | | party organizations prior to the! 1940 Presidential convention. :
eer ee CROWE WILL LEAVE |. AUG. 2 FOR NORWAY
Times Special Sa : WASHINGTON, July: 26—Rep.| Eugene B. Crowe (D. Ind.) announced today that he will leave Aug. 2 for Oslo, Norway, to attend the Interparliamentary Union Conference. Sor ey The conference begins Aug. 14 and Rep. Hamilton Fish (R. N. Y.) is president of the American group. Rep. Fish asked.Rep. Louis Ludlow AD. Ind.) to be a delegate but the Indianapolis ' congressman turned down the appointment. ye
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