Indianapolis Times, Volume 40, Number 301, Indianapolis, Marion County, 8 May 1929 — Page 2
PAGE 2
OSCAR FRENZLE, VICE-PRESIDENT I OF BANK, DIES Merchant’s National Officer , Started 5b Years Ago 1 as Messenger. financial circles of th city and *ta‘o today mourned tlir death of Oscar Frederick Frenzcl who rose from bank messenger to vice-presi-dent of the Merchant's National Bank in fifty-ftv< years of .contin aous service. Mr. Frmzcl, 68, died Tuesday at 2:30 p. m. a‘ his home, 1338 North New Jersey street., of a complication of disease; He had been in ill health five years. Funeral .cervices will be held Thursday. 3:30 p. m. at the home tilth the Rev. F. R. Daries, pastor of the Zion Evangelical church, officiating. Burial will be in Crown Hill. Pallbearers will be Otto N. Frenzcl Jr. Robert E. Sweeney Eugene C. Miller, Otto N. Mueller, Fred C. Krau sand Raymond B. Nicholson, all members of the ilyBorn in Indianapolis, the son of John P. and Caroline Frenzcl. Mr. Frenzcl was educated in the public schools and at 12 became messenger for the Merchants Bank, where he t would have completed his fiftyfourth year of continuous service July 21. 1923. He became assistant cashier in J 892, cashier in 1899 and vice-presi-dent in 1915* He was active in the Indiana State Bankers' Association and in the American Bankers’ Association. His conservatism and
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Financier Dies
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O.mr Frederick Frenzel, 68. vicepresident of the Merchants National Bank, who died Tuesday at his hoipc, 1338 North New Jersey street.
: ound banking judgment won him recognition throughout the middlewest. To Mr. Frenzel and his brothers John P Frenzel and Otto N. Frenze! is accorded much of the credit for building the Merchants National Bank to its present eminence. Surviving arc the widow, Mrs. Lillian Ba'ls Frenzel; a sister. Miss Louise W. Frenzel; two brothers. John P. Frenzel, president of the Merchants Bank, and Frederick V. Frenzel of Long Beach. Cal; two daughters, Mrs. Raymond B. Nicholson of Richmond. Ind., and Mrs. Batiste Haueisen of Indianapolis; three sons. James E. Frenzel, Oscar F. Frenzel Jr. and Henry John Frenzel and five grandchildren, all of Indianapolis.
GIL READY TO I SEEK PEACE IN CHURCH DISPUTE Mexican President to Begin Discussions With Heads of Catholics. BY GESFORD F. TINE lnt*d Press StafT Correspondent 1 MEXICO CITY, May B.—Settlement of Mexico's long standing rej ligious controversy was regarded today as the probable outcome of President Emilio Portes Gil’s announcement that he was ready to discuss the matter with Catholic authorities. The President's announcement Tuesday night opened the way for a renewal of negotiations disrupted a few months ago when the presideni tial train was dynamited. The military revolution of March 3 prevented a resumption of discus- ! sions until hostilities were ended. Portes Gil s statement was in anS swer tc one by Archbishop Leopoldo Ruiz y Flores, who said in Washing- : ton he believed the religious conflict in Mexico could be settled. The exact date on which the discussions will begin and the length of time they will run has not been decided. That must await an answer from the archbishop. Portes Gil called attention to his recent statement that he did not believe the Catholic church as an institution was connected with the Mexican revolution, and also that many members of the church had recommended obedience to the laws. The public was not overly exuberant when it learned of the Presi-
THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
Thaw Is Airman
A medical career had been planned for him, but Russell Thaw, 19-year-old son of Harry K. Thaw and Evelyn Nesbit. took up flying instead. He is shown here in his togs as a commercial aviator at the Atlantic City (N. J.) municipal airport. A licensed pilot since last December, he already has 120 flying hours to his credit.
dent's statement. It was recalled that strong pressure previously was brought to bear on both the church and the government to discuss the religious question but without avail. United States Ambassador Dwight W. Morrow also exerted his strongest efforts unofficially to bring about a solution, likewise without success. Nevertheless, it generally was felt that the new move was the most promising since the religious laws unfrocking priests, abolishing monastic orders, and confiscating church properties went into effect on July 31, 1926, and that it would probably bring a satisfactory solution, although perhaps not for some time.
4 FACE TERMS FOR FAKE BILLS Plead Guilty to Charges of Counterfeiting. 1 Two Chicago and two Kokomo men, indicted on counterfeiting charges, who entered pleas of guilty in federal court late Tuesday, will be sentenced Saturday morning by Federal Judge Robert C. Baltzell.’ They are James Ganor and Samuel Ball, Chicago private de- ; tectives, and William C. Cleland and Harry c. Powell, Kokomo. Cleland and Powell obtained a quantity of counterfeit S2O bills when they sold some liquor, George I R. Jeffrey, district attorney, dej dared. | Jeffrey said the government was : prepared to prove they disposed of a part of the bogus money for liquor and narcotics, then Cleland gave his share to Powell who had it in his possession when Ganor and Ball appeared and took them in charge. On the way to Chicago with their prisoners. Ball and Ganor are alleged to have agreed to free the two if they could obtain a $3,000 bribe. Efforts to borrow the money led to an investigation and arrest of all four men. John K. Stroll, former Indianapolis policeman, convicted by a jury of transporting a stolen automobile to Indianapolis from Florida in 1926, also will be sentenced Saturday. Robert Prater, held in connection with the Pettis dry goods store robbery’ last year, was released from jail on his own recognizance by Baltzell, who said he had learned Mrs. Prater was in destitute circumstances and had no milk to feed their baby.
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