Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 20 October 1939 — Page 7
7 FLOOD PLANS | ARE CONSIDERED
AT NEW ALBANY,
City Would Furnish Land
And U. S. Cash Under Basic Arrangement.
Times Special NEW ALBANY, Ind. Oct. 20.— U. 8 Army enginezrs, city officials and the New Albany Board of Realtors are considering two plans for construction of a series of , levees and walls to protect New Albany from possible Ohio River floods. One proposal is a continuous levee and wall along the west side of Silver Creek to the river, at a point about 300 feet west of Falling Run creek. This line would protect nearly all ‘property of substantial value. : Plan to Cross Tracks
The other plan would follow the same line as the first to the city limits on McCulloch Pike, where the levee would take a higher line to a crossing of the Baltimore & Ohio Railroad tracks about 700 feet east. of Silver St., follow the tracks and swing south and west over the Pennsylvania Railroad track and end at the K. & I. bridge approach. This route would have a gap between Vincennes St. and E. 10th St. where high ground serves as a natural protection to the city. Undér the present plans, the city would furnish the right-of-way while the Government would assume construction costs. No Cost Estimate Given No estimate of the total cost has been made. Most of the New Albany residents favor the first plan, which would protect a great deal more property, city officials said. The construction cost, however, would be higher.
HISTORIC COLLEGE ADMITS 31 PHILADELPHIA, Oct. 20 (U. P). —Thirty-one : new students have been admited to the 90th college year of the Women’s Medical College of Philadelphia.
lady.
Fund Protects the Little Ones
For families where both parents must be breadwinners, the Day Nursery and Kindergarten are maintained with the Community Fund’s help, as a working-hour Nil for attractive youhgsters like this little
Of Disciples
Times Special RICHMOND, Va., Oct. 20.—More than 100 Indianapolis visitors and delegates, including thre past presidents, are among the 6000 persons gathered here this week for the International Disciples of| Christ convention at the Seventh Street Christian Church. The annual world convention’s
formal opening last night was fea-
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tured by an address by Dr. Roger T. Nooe of Nashville, Tenn., and the reading of a message from President Roosevelt.
In the National Evangelistic Association . meeting which preceded the convention, the Rev. Willard M. Wickizer of Indianapolis, United Christian Missionary Society executive secretary, and Mrs. Arlene Dux Scoville, also of Indianapolis, were re-elected general secretary and recording secretary, respectively, of the Evangelistic Association. Floyd Allen Bash of Des Moines, Iowa, was elected president. Other Indianapolis delegates participating in the Association meeting were the Rev. E. L. Day, executive secretary, Indianapolis Christian Church Union, and Virgil P. Brock, song leader. Past presidents from Indianapolis attending. the international convention are Dr. A. E. Cory, pension fund director, Disciples of Christ; Dr. Frederick W. Kershner, dean of the Butler University college of religion, and Dr. William F, Rothenburger, Third Christian Church pastor. In his message, the President urged the delegates to reaffirm faith in the fundamental principles which have guaranteed the nation’s freedom, and praised the convention’s theme of “Faith, Freedom and Fellowship.” Dr. Noce told the international assembly that “the time has come for our nation to decide something of far more importance than the lifting or retention of the embargo.” The slogan, the speaker said, is “negatively conceived” and may lead us into war unless other factors are brought into play. “Peace for America, if it be retained, must be a great peace,” Dr. Nooe said, “and not just a refusal to go to war.”
TOURIST COURTESY CARDS
CLEVELAND, O., Oct. 20 (U. P.). —Tourists and visitors to this city will receive police courtesy cards.
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YOUNG BORE, 32,
GIVEN ACQUITTAL
Cleared “in Stepmother’s Death; Father Faces Murder Charge.
BENTON, Ill, Oct. 20 (U. P.).— George W. Gore Jr.,, 32, stood acquitted today of the murder -of his stepmother. His father, 55, who had wanted him to plead guilty, was
attorney who had advised the son to plead innocent. A Circuit Court jury of seven women and five men found young Gore not guilty late yesterday after deliberating an hour and a. half. The State had charged that he crept up to his father’s home the night of July 23 and fired three shots through a glass door into the body of his stepmother, Mrs. Nancy Gore, 39, as she lay asleep. His father, Dr. George W. Gore Sr., prominent surgical specialist, had testified that young Gore had threatened the stepmother. The State had demanded the death
which was read to the jury but which ‘young Gore charged had
degree methods. “The shots that killed Mrs. Gore,” the defense said, “were fired inside the porch on which she slept, not Hiiolgh a glass door, as Dr. Gore said.” Dr. Gore is awaiting trial for the murder of Carl Choisser, attorney and newspaper publisher, who was young Gore's cousin and closest friend. The acquittal did not give young Gore his freedom. He and his wife still face a charge of larceny for the theft of $600 from a young woman at Cape Girardeau, Mo.
a! D Warbritton. The second, BY SE MOUR ‘CLASS and Spice,” is to be coached by Miss Lillie E. Fosbrink, and the third, “Curse. You, Jack Daiton,” by Miss
Shields High School junior class will| Elisabeth Feaster. present three one-act plays, Miss| Casts include Ethel Swengel, class sponser, an- | Pauline Rogers, Richard Bollinger, ? Jeannette Coffey, Bruce McGuire, The first Play, “The White Phan- Doris Huber and Huber -Scplerling,
Times Special | SEYMOUR, Ind., Oct. 20.—The
nounced today.
by KR. N “Sugar|
Ingleby ' Rapp,
awaiting trial for having killed the |.
penalty on the basis of a confession |
been ‘ obtained from him by third |
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